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Will It Be A Smooth And Healthy Birth?
By Saneitha Nagani
It was said that to a woman having a baby can be one of the most exciting and rewarding
events of a womans life. This also must be true so on the assumption that the conception of the
baby in itself was the result of bonds between the woman and her partner were built on love and
compassion and not on the use of force such as rape and it was not an unwanted pregnancy of
any sort. In the same analogy, bringing about change in the country from the military dictatorship to
a much fairer and just society with democratic characteristics will also be the event that will be most
exciting and rewarding to the people of Burma. As Daw Suu has emphasised, Burma today is on the
verge of change. But no one can safely say for sure whether those changes will be brought in a
smooth and peaceful transition or whether it will be with violence and a lot of bloodletting in the
process. So far we are relying on the health and genuineness of the change through some vague
images we are getting from various reporting just as we did for the health of an unborn baby in the
mothers womb by the images of the scans we got from the doctors MIR machine.
The question that needs to be asked is that because of the method of conception whether the
woman should be allowed to give birth or what should she do after the baby is born. At this stage of
pregnancy, whether the baby is the result of a consensual exchange between the man and the
woman or she was forced to have it, then neither the doctor nor the midwife would be keen to
recommend the woman to have a late-term abortion. Their concerns will be more towards bringing
about the baby in a smooth and healthy birth. As the midwife of democratic change in Burma Daw
Suu would be more concerned with the manner in which the changes are brought about than the
legitimacy of Thein Seins government or bringing about justice to the victims of the previous
military regime.
For Daw Suu, change by any means has never been an option. She has always made the point clear
that, she did not believe in an armed struggle because it will perpetrate the tradition that he, who is
best at wielding arms, wields power. She also emphasised that Even if the democracy movement
were to succeed through force of arms, it would leave in the minds of the people the idea that
whoever has greater armed might wins in the end. That will not help democracy. What has been
happening in Libya now is the proof of the opposite of what Daw Suu believed in her quest for
freedom and democracy in Burma. She must be willing to take the path of least resistance and grab
the opportunity with both hands to bring about changes she believed in for the country.
Sooner or later Daw Suu also has to confront with the issue of introducing changes in the 2008
Constitution and the question of the legitimacy of the government which was formed under that
same Constitution. Recently, she has come out calling for changes to the military-drafted
constitution. In a speech given on her first political trip since ending a boycott of the countrys
political system last year and announcing plans to run for Parliament she mentioned that, There are
certain laws which are obstacles to the freedom of the people and we will strive to abolish these
laws within the framework of the parliament. She said she wants to revise the 2008 military-drafted
constitution that gives the military wide-ranging powers, including the ability to appoint key cabinet
members, take control of the country in a state emergency and occupy a quarter of the seats in
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parliament. Unlike the Pigs in George Orwells Animal Farm Daw Suus changes to the Constitution
of Burma would be the opposite of what the Pigs did to The Seven Commandments.
The way I see it, if Daw Suu is not going to pursue to get rid of the mischief and defect sections in
the present 2008 constitution and go along with the government once she became a
Parliamentarian after she has been elected in April by-elections then it would seem that she and her
party the National League for Democracy (NLD) has acquiesced to those laws. These laws are
not much different from the laws that the Taliban in Afghanistan had decreed on women who were
the rape victims and who for the sake of escaping from further punishment had to marry the men
who raped them in the first place. The laws under the military regime neither makes sense nor
conforms with the general principles of laws as recognised by civilised nations. They are drafted by
the military for the military and to sustain their rule; one-sided and self-serving just as the laws
decreed by the Taliban gave men unequal powers and unjust laws so that they can rape the women
whenever they feel like it and do not have to face the consequences for their actions under these
laws. According to their constitution the military in Burma can stage a military coup whenever they
deem it necessary for them to do so. There is neither checks nor balances just plain raw power -
power that comes out of the barrel of the gun, that is all.
Let us stretch our imagination a bit further. For the sake of argument say that the changes are
brought about peacefully and we have the birth of a new nation through this peaceful transition,
could we or should we expect a healthy baby born without difficulty? Although one can say there are
changes taking place in Burma it is by no means near what we could expect. Neither are they
changes that will usher in a new democratic form of government overnight. It is midwife and the
doctor telling the woman in labour to push, push when there was very little or no dilation big
enough for the babys head to come through. There is some opening, if one can called that an
opening anyway President Thein Sein may have extended an invitation for Burmese exiles living
abroad to come back home in public and because there was no legal basis to act upon it for those
who were either foolish enough or eager to garb the opportunity to do so seems to be havingdifficulties with the authorities at the airport or with the local authorities in their home towns. These
are quite common occurrence and when laws like the need to inform local authorities about
overnight visitors to the local authorities gave them opportunity to squeeze money out of Burmese
returnees. To say for sure that the country is opening up, having such petty laws makes a mockery of
the whole system.
The other odd thing is that, while people who were known to have been put away for crimes such as
high treason (but never admitted that there was such a crime and persons involved have been put
away under economic crimes and corruption) have been released without conditions but some
who were put away on charges that were not proven to the extent that they were guilty of
committing without the benefit of doubt or at best because of their tenuous link to what themilitary regime regarded as a crimes under their unjust laws were not released because they were
not regarded as prisoners of conscience. It does make a mockery of the system and it shows us
that we may still have a long way yet to go for our real glasnost and perestroika in Burma.
As the woman has to go through three stages in the birth of a child, opening up of Burma and
progressing towards democratic change may also have to go through these stages as well. In a child
birth the first stage of labour is said to be by far the longest and may last many hours. Burma, it
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seems to be in this stage where not many can help and neither Daw Suu nor President Thein Sein
were willing to tell the public what sort of understanding they have reached, how long will it take for
them to act upon those things that they have agreed and in what way the people might help
towards change. At the second stage not only there is a dilation of 10 cm in the cervix but also the
contractions of the uterus have propelled the babys head downwards into the birth canal that the
mother can now actively help in the delivery of the baby. After those two stages when the baby isout now for the first time the baby has to begin breathing air for itself. Until the moment of birth the
baby has been receiving oxygen from its mothers blood, transferred across the placenta. Likewise,
the country, in the aftermath of change, will have to breathe on its own like the placenta there is
no military regime to transfer the countrys resources to the government. As at the third stage of
the birth of a baby there is to be a final stage when the placenta and membranes are expelled then
New Burma, free from the military dictatorship, also has to get rid of those who have been
responsible for various crimes.
That will be the real test of the changes that are said to be taking place in Burma. The question for
us is, Can we close the door without facing the past? I am not a social scientist to say for sure that
we could move on without confronting the past. A belief that, the awareness of the past evil caninoculate a population against repetition can be a form of social catharsis but there is a variety of
ways that some kind of closure can be achieved as well. Daw Suu, when she was asked in an
interview with Alan Clements whether she can guarantee that there will be no criminal changes
against the members of the military regime, she said that, I will never make any personal
guarantees. I will never speak as an individual about such things. It is only for the NLD to speak as an
organisation a group that represents the people. But I do believe that truth and reconciliation go
together. Once the truth has been admitted, forgiveness is far more possible. Denying the truth will
not bring about forgiveness, neither will it dissipate the anger in those who have suffered. As for
the vision of a Truth and Reconciliation Council in Burma after it regains its second independence
Daw Suu said that, I think in every country which has undergone the kind of traumatic experience
that we have in Burma, there will be a need for truth and reconciliation. I dont think that people will
really thirst for vengeance once they have been given access to the truth. But the fact that they are
denied access to the truth simply stokes the anger and hatred in them. That their sufferings have not
been acknowledged makes people angry. That is one of the great differences between SLORC and
ourselves. We do not think that there is anything wrong with saying we made a mistake and that we
are sorry.
For the countrys sake, I hope that changes taking place in Burma are genuine and like the birth of a
child it may have to go through different stages but in the end the people in Burma should have a
happy, healthy social systems where everybody is equal before the law, their property rights are
fully protected and their human rights respected. The military may have acted as an Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) in a patient infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
- killing its own people and protecting the interests of the Chinese and a handful of their leaders -
but it will be a test for them as well to accept the people as their equals and their benefactors. Our
hope is that the birth will be smooth, no breech birth with the woman needing episiotomy to widen
the birth canal or needing the obstetrician to deliver the baby by caesarean section. END
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