Ultranationalist Myanmar monks unrepentant

Ultranationalist Myanmar monks unrepentant

Myanmar Buddhist monk U Wirathu (R), leader of the Ma Ba Tha movement, laughs during the Peace Organization of Ma Ba Tha (Patriotic Association of Myanmar) members conference in Yangon, Myanmar, 27 May 2017. Myanmar's highest Buddhist authority issued a statement to cease all signs and activities of Ma Ba Tha around the country by July 15. It had announced on 12 July 2016 that Ma Ba Tha is not a Buddhist organization that was formed in accordance with the basic Sangha rules, regulations and directives of the state authority. (EPA photo)
Myanmar Buddhist monk U Wirathu (R), leader of the Ma Ba Tha movement, laughs during the Peace Organization of Ma Ba Tha (Patriotic Association of Myanmar) members conference in Yangon, Myanmar, 27 May 2017. Myanmar's highest Buddhist authority issued a statement to cease all signs and activities of Ma Ba Tha around the country by July 15. It had announced on 12 July 2016 that Ma Ba Tha is not a Buddhist organization that was formed in accordance with the basic Sangha rules, regulations and directives of the state authority. (EPA photo)

HONG KONG — In the wake of vigilante attacks and brawls that have shaken Yangon, Myanmar’s largest and most cosmopolitan city, the country’s religious authorities are ramping up a crackdown on hard-line Buddhist monks who have played increasingly public roles as sectarian provocateurs.

On Tuesday, Myanmar’s top Buddhist authority, the State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee, ordered Ma Ba Tha, a prominent group led by ultranationalist monks, to remove its signs around the country by July 15. It also said that no organisation would be allowed to operate under the name Ma Ba Tha.

The orders were just the latest moves to clip the group’s wings amid fears that it could further destabilise a newly democratic country struggling to shake off the vestiges of military rule.

Ma Ba Tha’s leaders, however, responded with a defiant shrug.

“We are not sure whether we will follow this order or not,” said Maung Thawe Chun, a member of Ma Ba Tha’s Central Executive Committee, echoing public comments by his colleagues this week. “If we wish to, we will. If we don’t, we won’t.”

Sectarian tension is a fact of life in parts of Myanmar, a predominantly Buddhist country dotted with monasteries and gilded pagodas. But interfaith conflict has escalated sharply since 2012, when communal violence in the far-western state of Rakhine left dozens dead and displaced more than 100,000 members of the Muslim minority group Rohingya from their homes.

Other sectarian clashes were later reported in the country’s heartland, and Buddhist mobs killed more than 200 Muslims. Ma Ba Tha has long denied promoting violence, but critics say that its statements — which often go viral on social media — have clearly fuelled it.

“You can be full of kindness and love, but you cannot sleep next to a mad dog,” Ma Ba Tha’s best-known ultranationalist monk, Ashin Wirathu, said in a 2013 sermon, referring to Muslims.

Analysts say the Buddhist authority’s directive, and Ma Ba Tha’s headstrong reply, illustrate a central challenge facing the governing National League for Democracy, the political party led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

The government’s crackdown on Ma Ba Tha, they say, could ease pressure on Suu Kyi from rights advocates overseas who have criticised her inability — or perhaps unwillingness — to curb state-sanctioned violence against Rohingya who live in western Myanmar.

However, the analysts said, it could also drive Ma Ba Tha’s supporters toward political parties that increasingly embrace hard-line Buddhist rhetoric, including one party that is linked to the military junta that ruled Myanmar for decades until 2011.

The National League for Democracy “continues to ignore this movement in general at its peril,” Matthew J. Walton, a senior research fellow at the University of Oxford who studies religion and politics in Myanmar, said of Ma Ba Tha.

Popular support for Ma Ba Tha did not hurt Suu Kyi’s party in Myanmar’s 2015 general election, the first since the end of military rule, because many people voted for broad change instead of specific policies, Mr Walton said. But because that could change by the next general election in 2020, he added, the National League for Democracy must ask monks who support it to “articulate an alternative discourse of protecting and promoting the Buddhist religion that doesn’t require expelling Muslims.”

 

A boy sit in a burnt area after fire destroyed shelters at a camp for internally displaced Rohingya Muslims in the western Rakhine State near Sittwe, Myanmar May 3, 2016. (Reuters file photo)

The state-run Buddhist authority’s directive on Tuesday came two weeks after a raid on a Muslim neighbourhood in Yangon by Buddhist vigilantes who were searching for Rohingya they believed were hiding there illegally. There is a widespread view in Myanmar that Rohingya are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, regardless of whether their families have lived in Myanmar for generations.

The raid led to street clashes between Buddhists and Muslims, a rarity in Yangon, and left at least one person injured. A Buddhist nationalist group, the Patriotic Monks Union, later claimed responsibility for the raid, and several people were charged with incitement to commit violence.

Sectarian tensions have been especially high in Myanmar since the fall, when Rohingya militants killed nine police officers at a border post in Rakhine, inciting a brutal counterinsurgency campaign that sent tens of thousands of Rohingya fleeing into neighbouring Bangladesh. In March, widespread reports of state-sanctioned rape and killing in Rakhine led the United Nations to call for a fact-finding mission to investigate accusations of rights violations by Myanmar’s army and security forces.

In another potential blow to religious harmony, Ko Ni, a Muslim lawyer and a top adviser to the National League for Democracy, was shot and killed outside Yangon’s international airport in January, in what appeared to be a political assassination. Ko Ni had been working on a plan to replace Myanmar’s military-drafted Constitution with one that would strip the military of its political powers.

Tuesday’s order by the state-controlled Buddhist committee is the latest in a series of moves by the country’s religious authorities to push back against Ma Ba Tha’s influence. Last summer, for example, a top Yangon official said that the group was “not necessary” for the country, and the committee rebuked an assertion by Ashin Wirathu, the nationalist monk, that Ma Ba Tha was operating under the committee’s authority. And in March, the committee barred him from preaching for a year.

Khin Maung Lwin, a taxi driver in Yangon, said he welcomed the Buddhist authority’s moves to clamp down on Ma Ba Tha’s activities. “We don’t need Ma Ba Tha” because Myanmar already has an official Buddhist clergy, he said. “It will only create divisions among monks.”

Ma Ba Tha was formed in 2013 and gained prominence by promoting a package of so-called race and religion laws that were passed by a military-backed government just before the 2015 election. The laws cover topics like monogamy and interfaith marriage and are widely seen by scholars and human rights groups as discriminatory toward Muslims.

After the Buddhist authority’s directive this week, Ma Ba Tha cancelled an event that it had planned for this weekend in Yangon to celebrate its fourth anniversary, according to reports in the local news media. But the group’s leaders have asked their supporters to gather in Yangon anyway for a briefing about the group’s next steps.

Few expect Ma Ba Tha to go quietly. Mr Walton said that the group had recently created a spinoff, called Dhamma Wunthanu Rakita, “to do the things that monks can’t do, like bring defamation lawsuits.” He predicted that the group would essentially rebrand itself.

“This isn’t going to spell the end for extremist monks affiliated with Ma Ba Tha,” said Matthew Smith, the chief executive of Fortify Rights, an advocacy group based in Thailand that has urged Suu Kyi’s government to curb state-sanctioned violence against the Rohingya. “They’re still mobilising, they still have a sizable following, and they’re still attempting to influence the minds of young people.”

But even though the National League for Democracy’s patience for hard-line Buddhist groups has “clearly worn thin,” the party remains unwilling to challenge the race and religion laws and other policies that institutionalise discrimination, said Gerard McCarthy, the associate director of the Myanmar Research Centre at the Australian National University.

“Anti-Muslim sentiment is ubiquitous in Myanmar and has not been challenged by the NLD in any substantive or legislative sense so far,” he said.

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