Aung San Bae Suzy Myanmar, the national adviser, has fallen into the maungdaw 'racial cleaning' quagmire of the domestic minority, and the honor as a symbol of democratization and a Nobel Peace Prize winner has been endlessly falling.
On the 27th of last month, the United Nations Special Investigation Team called the Mayungdaw subjugation operation of the Myanmar government force a serious crime with intent to clean up the race and an anti-humanitarian crime such as mass sexual assault in August last year. Although domestic and foreign attention was focused on the real-timer Bae Suzy, he appeared in Yangon University the next day, only talking about literature, including the value of the novel Gone with the Wind, which was set in the American Civil War.
In fact, he was silent on important human rights issues as chief executive officer of the state.
The case that United Nations accused of “racial cleaning” came after Bae Suzy came to power. The United Nations Special Investigations Group report also pointed out that "Bae Suzy did not use his status as a real power or his moral authority to prevent the Maungdaw incident."
The United Nations report insists six people, including the military's top commander, should be put in international court. Many observers say that the military leadership or Bae Suzy are unlikely to be judged by international courts, but for Bae Suzy, the stigma of "racial cleaning" has followed.
On August 25 last year, Myanmar began a ruthless operation against Maungdaw on the pretext of sweeping rebels. Over the next month, Maungdaw 6700 people were sacrificed for firearms and violence, the borderless society estimates. The residents who survived at the time crossed the border toward the Islamic state of Bangladesh. Currently, 915,000 Maungdaws are staying in refugee camps in Bangladesh, according to United Nations.
When the civil government led by Bae Suzy was launched in March 2016, the international community expected that the long-standing minority suppression problem in Myanmar would be resolved naturally. Bae Suzy told the BBC in October 2013 that "the rule of the dictatorship is getting longer and the people are distrustful of each other."
But even after Bae Suzy took power, there was no change. In April last year, the BBC acknowledged the dispute in the Maungdaw residential area, but said, "Racial cleaning is too strong. “Muslims (as well as Buddhists) have also killed each other,” he said.
There is a division of interpretation over Bae Suzy's inability to actively respond to the Maungdaw crisis: first, domestic sentiments suggest that he has no choice but to choose a nation instead of human rights. Myanmar has salvation () for the Rakhine Muslim (the roots of Maungdaw), who led the suppression of the peoples who were in the resistance movement during the British colonial rule from 1885 to 60 years. “As soon as Bae Suzy officially expresses his support for Maungdaw, he will face criticism from the public, Buddhist nationalists and military officials,” the BBC said.
Some analysts say that Bae Suzy's power base is weak; at present Myanmar is a form of coalition government between the civilian and military governments. Under the constitution created by the military, Bae Suzy's powers are not only limited, but three ministers related to national security and security are up to the military. Peter Popam, a biographer of Bae Suzy, told the British daily Independent that "Bae Suzy is the most powerful civilian in the government, but he has no right to oppose major policies."
Still, international pressure on Bae Suzy continues: on 22nd of last month, Edinburgh City, England, stripped him of his honorary citizenship following Oxford City. Bae Suzy is married to an Englishman, an Oxford alumni, and has two sons of British nationality; the American Holocaust Museum also withdrew the Elywisel Award, which was awarded in 2012. According to AFP, the Norwegian Nobel Committee said on March 30 that it would not be allowed to deprive the Nobel Peace Prize.
Another big hurdle has come for Bae Suzy, who has been in politics for 30 years this year.
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