(Catherine Renshaw’s article from the INTERPRETER on August 10, 2021.)
The aim is now revolution and an end to the
military’s decades-long dominance of political life. The revolutionaries have
brought within their fold some of the armed ethnic organisations that have long
fought against the military in the country’s borderlands. Civil war is looming.
A different battle for Myanmar is being fought in the United Nations.
On 14 September, the 75th UN General Assembly (UNGA) will meet in New York. Presidents, prime ministers and dictators from across the world – or their representatives – will gather to discuss, debate and make recommendations on global issues. The question de jour is who will represent Myanmar – the military’s representative or the representative of the democratically elected, ousted government?
It is the job of
a nine-country Credentials Committee to make a recommendation to the UNGA about
whose credentials to accept. It is rare for the Committee to accept the
credentials of an ousted government that does not hold power or control
territory, but it is not unprecedented (Haiti in 1992, Sierra Leone in 1997).
In some contentious cases, the Committee has deferred making any decision at
all (Afghanistan in 1996 and Cambodia in 1997).
What happens in
the UNGA is another matter again. It is common practice for the UNGA to accept
the recommendations of the Credentials Committee without a vote. But there is
no rule that it must. In 1973, the UNGA voted to reject the credentials of the
representatives of South Africa because of the country’s anti-democratic
apartheid regime.
In the case of
Myanmar, the UNGA stands with the democratically elected government. In June
2021, the UNGA passed a resolution calling on Myanmar’s armed forces to respect
the will of the people – as freely expressed in the 8 November 2020 election –
and called on all countries to end arms dealing with Myanmar.
The resolution is not binding but it is significant
– the UNGA very rarely condemns coups. The resolution was passed with only one
vote against – that of Belarus – and with the support of more than half the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) states. A vote in the UNGA about
the credentials of the Myanmar appointee would probably go the way of the
ousted government.
In the run-up to
September, Myanmar’s government-in-exile, the National Unity Government (NUG),
is engaged in a worldwide lobbying effort for diplomatic recognition.
Recognition – by powerful states or by many states – would boost the NUG’s case
for recognition by the Credentials Committee.
Recognition of a
government on a state-to-state basis is a unilateral political act – states are
entitled to recognise whichever government they want. The general practice is
that states recognise the government that exercises military control over the
territory of the state – and holds the capital city. On this count, in
Myanmar’s case, the military’s claim is stronger.
It would be a
historic moral victory for the men and women fighting in Myanmar if a
representative of the NUG were to take the seat of Myanmar in September. But it
would also seriously undermine the prospect of bringing the crisis to an end.
The military controls Myanmar’s airspace and while
it does, the revolutionaries cannot win the battle for territory. China, Russia
and many of Myanmar’s neighbours in ASEAN have effectively recognised the
governing authority created by the military, the State Administrative Council
(SAC).
Key NLD members
such as State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint form part of
the NUG. Other members include parliamentarians from the ousted government and
representatives of most of the country’s many ethnic states – and with
discussions to include a Rohingya representative.
No state has yet granted recognition to the NUG,
though many have met with NUG representatives. In recent meetings of the UN
Human Rights Council and the World Health Organisation, neither the NUG nor the
SAC has been given a seat. This may be the outcome in the UNGA as well.
It would be a
historic moral victory for the men and women fighting in Myanmar if a
representative of the NUG were to take the seat of Myanmar in September. But it
would also seriously undermine the prospect of bringing the crisis to an end.
With the symbolic support of the UN behind them, those on the ground in Myanmar
would fight harder for a costly and improbable victory.
The military,
ostracised still further, would have fewer reasons to move forward with the
only concession it has made to date – the Five-Point Consensus adopted at the
ASEAN Leaders Meeting on 24 April.
ASEAN has now
appointed a Special Envoy to Myanmar and the UN has committed to working with
the Envoy to alleviate Myanmar’s growing humanitarian crisis. Leaving Myanmar’s
seat vacant in the UNGA is the best representation of what is happening on the
ground. It also provides the best chance of stemming the tide of civil war.
China and Russia are behind the Myanmar Army's illegal power grab. |