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Burma: Junta Gives Referendum Priority Over Cyclone Relief
By Larry Jagan
Inter Press Service
Thursday 08 May 2008
Bangkok - Disregarding the disaster caused by Cyclone Nargis, Burma's
military rulers are bent on holding a constitutional referendum on Saturday,
said to be designed to enhance the junta's grip over the country.
"The relief efforts are being hampered by the junta's obsession
with getting the referendum vote over and done with," a western diplomat
based in Rangoon told IPS on condition of anonymity.
According to reports over 70,000 people were killed and 30,000 more gone missing
or presumed dead. Local Burmese aid officials believe that the death toll could
rise to over a quarter of a million. At least two million people have been left
homeless.
"The government's attitude is that the referendum is the top priority
and the cyclone is an inconvenience; we believe any government's priority should
be the humanitarian response rather than the referendum," the diplomat
added.
Undeterred by the desperate conditions facing nearly half of the country's
population concentrated in Rangoon, the country's commercial centre and
former capital, and the Irrawaddy Delta to the east - Burma's rice bowl
- the regime continues to call on the people to endorse the new constitution
on Saturday.
"To approve the state constitution is a national duty of the entire people,
let us all cast a 'Yes' vote in the national interest," state-run
newspapers continue to urge all Burmese.
People are also being exhorted by state media to 'resist foreign intervention'
though it is not clear whether this refers to the poll process or to desperately-needed
international cyclone relief.
Paul Risley, spokesman for the United Nations' World Food Programme (WFP) in
Bangkok, said Thursday that the junta was yet to give clearance for relief flights
to land in Burma. Acording to Risley, flights were still waiting to take off
from Dubai, Dhaka and Thailand with high-energy biscuits.
The irony is that very few people have actually seen the draft constitution.
In Rangoon, it sells for at least 1,000 kyat, the equivalent of one US dollar,
in a country where 80 percent of families live on less than two dollars a day.
The cost varies in other parts of the country - from the equivalent of two
dollars a copy in the Mon state, near the border with Thailand, to more than
four dollars in the predominantly Muslim areas in Arakan and Rakhine states
in the west near Bangladesh, according to Sai Khuensai Jaiyen, director of the
Shan Herald Agency, a dissident publication based in northern Thailand.
In fact the government is hoping for a unanimous vote, though that is inconceivable
unless the results are rigged - something which most diplomats in Rangoon believe
is highly likely. There are no official opinion polls available and public sentiment
is hard to gauge.
Rangoon's taxi drivers - a good weather vane of public opinion - interviewed
before the cyclone struck were of one mind: little is going to change by having
a new constitution. "What's the point of voting, they (the military)
just order everyone around and don't care what people think," said
Min Thu, a taxi driver in Rangoon. "If they promise to reduce the cost
of petrol, then I would certainly vote."
"I'm going to vote 'yes' because I'm tired of
the top brass running the country, and doing it very badly," said a colonel
who wanted to remain anonymous for safety reasons. "It's time to
get them out of government and a new constitution is the only sure way of doing
that," he added.
Impoverished farmers in Burma's once prosperous rice growing areas in
the Irrawaddy Delta were delighted with the opportunity to tell the government
what they think of them, a western aid worker told IPS on condition of anonymity.
"It's the first opportunity since the 1990 election that they have
had to express themselves," she said. "And they see it as a referendum
on the military government; so expect a resounding 'no' from them."
Of course, after the cyclone destroyed hundreds of villages in the Irrawaddy
area, these farmers may no longer have an opportunity to voice their resentment.
The vote has been postponed there - and may never happen. "Not only are
the tens of thousands dead, the wind and water destroyed local and provincial
offices, including the lists of registered voters," said an Asian diplomat.
"They will not be able to recover those in the two weeks they have delayed
the polls there."
Several opposition Burmese media organisations have been working clandestinely
inside the country trying to collect an unofficial survey of electoral opinion
on the referendum.
Burma News International (BNI) - an umbrella group of more than ten publications
and agencies - which interviewed more than 2,000 voters across the county,
before the cycloned struck, produced startling results.
Mu Hlaing Theint, secretary of the BNI, told IPS that a two-page questionnaire,
to ensure statistical consistency, was used to compile the results from telephone
and face-to-face interviews.
Almost seven out of ten interviewed said they had no idea what was in the constitution.
One in four voters had still to make up their minds which way they would vote.
So, despite the regime's intensive propaganda campaign there remains a
significant number of undecided voters.
Of those who said they would vote, more than two-thirds said they would vote
no. Around one in ten said they intended to vote yes. Soldiers were most likely
to vote yes - at a ratio of 2 to 1 - while government employees were almost
evenly divided between yes and no votes.
Students, teachers, farmers, journalists and housewives overwhelmingly said
they intended to reject the constitution. Housewives, shopkeepers, business
people and traders were most undecided about which way to vote - 1 in 3 had
yet to make up their minds.
The 'no' vote was also strongest in the areas that had large populations
of ethnic minorities - Chin, Kachin, Karen, Karenni, Mon and Shan states -
where well over 80 percent were going to vote against the constitution.
While these are not scientific results, they do reflect what observers are
predicting will happen in these areas. The regime, well aware of the regional
variations, has decided not to announce the results at each polling station
or even provincial level. The only announcement will come from the equivalent
of the electoral commission in the capital Naypidaw.
"This is very different from the 1990 elections, when the election results
were made public at each local polling station," Zin Linn, a former political
prisoner and now spokesman for the Burmese government-in-exile. "It means
they will be able to manipulate the results to their own ends."
There is no doubt though that the real vote is not going to be announced -
it has been rigged from the start. The junta has carried out a concerted campaign
of harassing and intimidating voters. "The police called on our family
last week and told us we had to vote 'yes' or we'd go to jail
for three years," a middle-aged mother in Rangoon said over phone,
on condition of anonymity.
"The whole process is surreal - to have a referendum where only those
who are in favour of the constitution can campaign," former U.N. rapporteur
for human rights in Burma Prof. Paulo Pinheiro told IPS.
"A referendum without some basic freedoms - of assembly, political parties
and free speech - is a farce. What the Myanmar (Burmese) government calls a
process of democratisation is in fact a process of consolidation of an authoritarian
regime," Pinheiro added.
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