A New Dimension of Violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine State A New Dimension of Violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine State
From the Crisis Group:
Ethnic Rakhine insurgents have attacked four police stations in Myanmar’s Rakhine State, provoking a military counteroffensive. Escalation could imperil both prospects for Rohingya repatriation and the country’s transition toward civilian rule. All sides should step back from confrontation and pursue talks about Rakhine State’s future.
Ethnic Rakhine insurgents have attacked four police stations in Myanmar’s Rakhine State, provoking a military counteroffensive. Escalation could imperil both prospects for Rohingya repatriation and the country’s transition toward civilian rule. All sides should step back from confrontation and pursue talks about Rakhine State’s future.
What’s new? Arakan Army attacks on remote police outposts in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine State left thirteen officers dead, prompting the government to order military “clearance operations” against the ethnic Rakhine insurgents. The looming violent escalation will be difficult to reverse – and will complicate efforts to repatriate Rohingya refugees to Myanmar.
Why did it happen? Despite the main ethnic Rakhine party’s election victory in 2015, Aung San Suu Kyi installed a minority National League for Democracy government in the state and the government imprisoned a popular Rakhine politician on high treason charges. These actions fuelled the belief among ethnic Rakhine that politics is failing them.
Why does it matter? Rising violence in Rakhine State will deepen the longstanding political crisis there and undermine prospects for the repatriation of Rohingya refugees. It will also impede Myanmar’s broader peace process and political transition.
What should be done? The military, government and insurgents should exercise restraint and seek a negotiated solution to the violence to avoid further inflaming ethnic tensions. China should work to bring all sides to the negotiating table. The government should initiate dialogue with ethnic Rakhine representatives over key political, economic and social issues.
I. Overview
On 4 January – Myanmar’s Independence Day – the Arakan Army (AA), an ethnic Rakhine group, launched coordinated attacks on four police outposts in northern Rakhine State, killing thirteen officers and injuring nine others. The attacks followed months of low-grade violence in the state, including a roadside bomb attributed to the AA that struck the chief minister’s convoy but did little damage. The government has directed the military to launch “clearance operations” against the group, which will likely precipitate further violence and civilian casualties. Thousands of civilians have already fled villages near the raided outposts. The attacks signify a dangerous shift from politics to insurgency as the means of addressing ethnic Rakhine grievances. The state is already afflicted by the Rohingya mass flight; an escalated fight between ethnic Rakhine and the government would represent a blow to Myanmar’s political transition to civilian rule and be difficult to stop. All sides should step back from confrontation and instead discuss how best to address Rakhine grievances through political channels.
The spotlight on the emergence of the Arakan Rohingya
Salvation Army (ARSA) in 2016-2017, and the subsequent persecution and exodus
of more than 800,000 Rohingya Muslims to Bangladesh, has obscured the three-way
nature of the conflict in Rakhine State. The ethnic Rakhine, who are often
portrayed as aggressors toward the Rohingya, have themselves been victims of
neglect and oppression by ethnic Burman-controlled central governments for
generations. Rakhine grievances against the ethnic Burman majority run deep,
yet often go unacknowledged in assessments of the conflict in Rakhine State.
Renewed violence in northern Rakhine State will further
diminish prospects for large-scale repatriation of Rohingya refugees.
Historically, the Rakhine have not had a powerful ethnic
Rakhine insurgent group to give expression to their political aspirations, but
since 2014 the AA has emerged to fill this perceived void in Rakhine State. A
series of developments in Rakhine State over the past five years, including the
ARSA attacks against state security forces in northern Rakhine State in
2016-2017 and political tensions between leading ethnic Rakhine figures and
Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) government, has allowed
the AA to gain a foothold in Rakhine, both militarily and politically.
The consequences of the Independence Day attacks are likely
to be serious. Renewed violence in northern Rakhine State will further diminish
prospects for large-scale repatriation of Rohingya refugees. The attacks may
also jeopardise prospects for progress in the peace process just weeks after
Myanmar’s military announced an unprecedented unilateral ceasefire. Although
that ceasefire did not cover Rakhine State, ostensibly because of operations
against ARSA, the AA had recently made a significant peace overture to the
government. The violence is also likely to heighten tensions between ethnic
Rakhine and Burman political actors at both the state and national levels. The
NLD government’s immediate response, to declare the AA “terrorists”, has only
exacerbated these tensions.
The military should exercise restraint in its response to
the attacks, avoiding the violence against civilians that precipitated the
flight of Rohingya refugees to Bangladesh, while the AA should refrain from
further aggression targeting either the military or civilians. China ought to
try to use its influence over the peace process to bring the AA and the
government to the negotiating table. It should also encourage the military to
expand its unilateral ceasefire to explicitly include Rakhine State. The government
should initiate a dialogue about how best to address current tensions and
future political aspirations with ethnic Rakhine political parties and other
communal representatives.
II. Raising the Stakes
Shortly before 7am on 4 January, the AA launched coordinated
attacks on four Border Guard Police outposts in a remote area of northern
Rakhine State’s Buthidaung township, close to the border with Bangladesh.
Government reports state that the AA sent around 350 heavily armed fighters to
raid the posts, which were only lightly defended. The defenders were forced to
abandon two of the outposts but held out for several hours at the other two
with the help of artillery and air support. They were eventually relieved by
Border Guard and army reinforcements, after which AA fighters withdrew. The
raiders killed thirteen officers and injured nine; they also seized 40 weapons
and more than 16,000 rounds of ammunition.[fn]“AA launches massive coordinated
attacks on four border police outposts in Buthidaung township, leaves 9
injured, 13 police personnel killed”, Global New Light of Myanmar, 5 January
2019.Hide Footnote A day later, the group released
fourteen police officers and four civilians whom it had captured in the
fighting.
The military and police had received warnings that attacks
were planned, but appeared unprepared for the scale of the offensive.[fn]Crisis
Group interviews, political analysts involved in the peace process, Yangon,
January 2019.Hide Footnote One Border Guard Police
commander described it as “stabbing us in the back”, suggesting that the AA
should view ARSA as the common enemy and refrain from undermining government
efforts to contain the Muslim group.[fn]“AA backstabbed gov’t forces in Jan 4
attacks: Border guard officer”, The Irrawaddy, 7 January 2019.Hide Footnote
Rather than leave the response to the military, the
government took the initiative by calling a rare high-level meeting of senior
military and civilian officials on 7 January.[fn]Although this meeting featured
all eleven members of the National Defence and Security Council, the NLD
government did not publicly describe it as a council meeting. It also included
additional actors, including four government ministers, the head of the Peace
Commission and the chief of Military Affairs Security. The government has yet
to call a council meeting since taking office, something for which the military
has criticised it.Hide Footnote It ordered
“clearance operations” targeting the AA – the first time the NLD administration
had publicly issued a command to the military regarding military operations.
Speaking to the media after the 7 January meeting, government spokesman Zaw
Htay said President Win Myint had directed the military to “crush the
terrorists”.[fn]At an 18 January press conference, a military spokesman claimed
that during the 7 January meeting Aung San Suu Kyi “instructed us to
effectively crush the AA and if not, there will be finger-pointing that
[the Myanmar military] does not crush the AA as it is an ethnic group, but it
crushed ARSA, who practice a different religion.” See “AA must give up goal of
confederation: Myanmar military”, The Irrawaddy, 18 January 2019.Hide Footnote In an apparent attempt to
discredit the AA among ethnic Rakhine, Zaw Htay accused the group of having
links to ARSA, saying it was operating two bases inside Bangladesh. He
suggested foreign powers were behind the fighting, warning the Rakhine people:
Do they want to see a cycle of violence lasting decades? … I
want to tell the Rakhine people who are supporting [the AA]: Don’t think about
yourself, but think about your next generation.[fn]“Myanmar’s civilian,
military leaders meet, vow to ‘crush’ Rakhine rebels”, Reuters, 7 January 2019.Hide Footnote
Although similar language has been deployed in the fight
against ARSA, it is highly unusual in the context of an armed organisation like
the AA that is affiliated with a recognised ethnic group such as the Rakhine.[fn]The
government officially recognises 135 ethnic groups as indigenous. This category
does not include most people of Chinese or South Asian descent, including the
Rohingya.Hide Footnote The government’s response
risks inflaming an already tense situation, widening ethnic divisions between
the Rakhine and the Burmans and encouraging increasing numbers of ethnic
Rakhine people to voice support for the AA. It is also a risky strategy to
order the military response, as it means the government will be to some extent
responsible for the conduct and consequences of military operations against the
AA.
The Myanmar military has reportedly moved troops from two
light infantry divisions to the conflict zone and captured one AA temporary
outpost in Buthidaung township.[fn]“A new war rages in Myanmar”, Asia Times, 15
January 2019.Hide Footnote The military claims that it
killed thirteen AA soldiers between 5-16 January, but refused to divulge its
own losses.[fn]“AA must give up goal of confederation: Myanmar military”, The
Irrawaddy, 18 January 2019.Hide Footnote While
further conflict is expected, the AA is anticipated to pull back in the coming
months because its supply lines are stretched and the dry season will be
drawing to a close.[fn]Crisis Group interview, political analyst involved in
the peace process, Yangon, January 2019.Hide Footnote
The military may instead focus its attention on civilians, seeking to undermine
support for the AA by making large-scale arrests.[fn]Ibid.Hide Footnote
In a further concerning development for stability in Rakhine State, a 16
January ambush on Border Guard Police in Maungdaw township that left six
officers injured was initially blamed on the AA but later attributed to ARSA
after a video of the incident was posted to social media, apparently by the
Muslim group.[fn]“Fresh ARSA attack injured six police officers”, The Irrawaddy,
20 January 2019.Hide Footnote If ARSA is
indeed responsible, as appears likely, it would be the group’s first
significant attack in more than a year.
The toll on civilians has been steep, with at least 4,500
people forced to flee their homes and seek shelter in monasteries.
The immediate trigger for the AA attacks is not entirely
clear. One factor may have been the Myanmar military’s declaration of a
unilateral ceasefire on 21 December that covered five regional military
commands in Kachin and Shan states through 30 April 2019. Although the military
said it did not include Rakhine State because of the need to continue
operations against ARSA, the AA appears to believe that the purpose was instead
to redirect troops from Shan and Kachin states against it. AA leader Tun Myat
Naing said his soldiers had targeted police posts because the Border Police had
been working with the Myanmar military to carry out its “four cuts”
counter-insurgency strategy against AA forces.[fn]The authorities developed the
“four cuts” strategy in the 1970s, with the aim of cutting off insurgents’
access to food, funds, recruits and intelligence.Hide Footnote
The goal of the AA attacks seems to be to establish a foothold in northern
Rakhine State and solidify support among Rakhine people, thus strengthening the
AA’s position in any future peace negotiations. “They feel this is their moment
to push”, said one source involved in the peace process with close ties to AA
officials.[fn]Crisis Group interview, source close to the AA, Yangon, January
2019.Hide Footnote
In response, the EU’s Myanmar delegation issued a statement
“deploring” the attacks but also acknowledging the “deep-rooted historical
grievances in Rakhine State [that] can only be solved through dialogue and an
inclusive political process”. The EU representatives called on the Tatmadaw to
expand its unilateral ceasefire to Rakhine State.[fn]“Local EU Statement on the
Escalation of Violence in Rakhine State”, Delegation of the European Union to
Myanmar, Yangon, 10 January 2019.Hide Footnote China
said it “supports the efforts by the Myanmar side to maintain peace and
stability” and called for restraint and the resolution of “relevant issues
through dialogue and consultation”.[fn]“Chinese Embassy’s Statement on the
Violence in Rakhine State”, Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in the
Republic of the Union of Myanmar, 5 January 2019.Hide Footnote
The toll on civilians has been steep, with at least 4,500
people forced to flee their homes and seek shelter in monasteries, where they
are receiving aid from the government, International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC), civil society groups and local residents.[fn]“Asia and the Pacific:
Weekly Regional Humanitarian Snapshot (1-7 Jan 2019)”, UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 7 January 2019.Hide Footnote
On 10 January, the Rakhine State government issued an order banning all UN
agencies and international and local NGOs from visiting five conflict-affected
townships, except for the ICRC and World Food Programme.[fn]“Aid groups barred
from Rakhine conflict zones”, The Myanmar Times, 14 January 2019.Hide Footnote Local media has also reported
that the military has blocked attempts by Rakhine NGOs to send food shipments
to displaced people.[fn]“Concern mounts for IDPs in northern Rakhine as army
blocks aid shipments”, The Irrawaddy, 9 January 2019.Hide Footnote
III. A Building Storm
The attacks underline the Arakan Army’s growing military
capability, which is built on rising popular support among ethnic Rakhine that
has helped fill its coffers and swell its numbers with new recruits. Its growth
has occurred in a short time. The AA was formed in 2009 at the Kachin
Independence Army (KIA) headquarters in Laiza. In 1994, the KIA had signed a
ceasefire with the military government, but fifteen years later it sensed that
the accord was on the verge of collapse.[fn]See Crisis Group Asia Briefing
N°140, A Tentative Peace in Myanmar’s Kachin Conflict, 12 June 2013,
Section III.C.Hide Footnote It had expected to keep its
arms and autonomy under the truce, but the government was pressing it to become
a Border Guard Force under the military’s command. As an insurance policy in
the event of renewed fighting, the KIA sponsored the establishment of two
proxies, the AA and Ta’ang National Liberation Army, supplying them with arms
from its weapons factory.[fn]The ceasefire did break down in June 2011, and the
KIA remains in conflict with the Myanmar military. Ibid.Hide Footnote
The AA mostly confined itself to KIA territory until around
2014, when it began to infiltrate southern Chin State and, later, far northern
Rakhine State, resulting in sporadic clashes with state forces. From these
remote areas its soldiers have reportedly encroached southward over the past
year, into the fringes of Buthidaung, Ponnagyun, Rathedaung and Kyauktaw
townships.[fn]“Analysis: Arakan Army – A powerful new threat to the Tatmadaw”, The
Irrawaddy, 8 January 2019.
A number of factors, both historical and recent, are
fuelling this support for the AA. The Rakhine have grievances against the
ethnic Burman majority that date back centuries, to the fall of the kingdom of
Mrauk-U in 1784, and they blame central government neglect and lack of
political autonomy for the state’s deep poverty. Many Rakhine view the Burmans
as the bigger enemy than Muslims in the state, something that the government
and many other Burman political actors do not acknowledge or are unwilling to
address. The Rakhine are perhaps less wary of open war than other ethnic groups
in the country, having no recent experience of armed conflict with the
government, due to the lack of a strong ethnic armed group. In some quarters,
there is even a palpable sense of excitement about the AA’s exploits.[fn]This
sentiment is very clear on social media. For more detailed discussion of
Rakhine grievances, see Crisis Group Asia Report N°261, The Politics of Rakhine State, 22 October 2014.Hide Footnote
The NLD’s ascension to power has only aggravated the
underlying grievances. Under President Thein Sein, the government made some
effort to consult Rakhine political leaders and include them in
decision-making. It also used economic concessions strategically to create
alliances. In contrast, the NLD ignored demands from the Arakan National Party
– which won a clear majority of elected seats in the state in 2015 elections –
to be given the chief minister position, instead appointing a relatively weak
NLD member to the post. Following the ARSA attacks in 2016-2017 and subsequent
flight of 800,000 Rohingya Muslims, the central government has moved to assert
further control over executive functions in Rakhine, rendering the state
government largely powerless and sidelining the legislature.
Several events in 2018 proved particularly significant. On
16 January, police opened fire on a group of protesters in Mrauk-U, seat of the
ancient Rakhine kingdom that fell to the Burmans, killing seven people and
injuring a dozen more. The protest came after the township administrator
cancelled a planned ceremony to mark the anniversary of the fall of the Rakhine
kingdom, incensing the large crowd that had gathered in the town. Two days
later, the state’s leading politician, Dr Aye Maung, was arrested in Sittwe
together with a popular writer and civil society activist, Wai Hin Aung. Aye
Maung remains on trial and faces a potential death sentence for high treason
and incitement, after giving a speech shortly before the 16 January clash in
which he allegedly said the Burmans consider the Rakhine slaves and expressed
support for armed struggle to establish greater sovereignty for the Rakhine
people.
The arrest of Aye Maung and infighting within the Arakan
National Party has left a leadership vacuum that the AA has quickly filled.
With no clear political path to addressing their grievances, many Rakhine
people increasingly see armed struggle as the more effective response to
perceived Burman oppression.
The AA has cleverly sought to leverage grievances through
both online and other activities, such as the #ArakanDream2020 social media
campaign and t-shirts emblazoned with “The Way of Rakhita”, the name that the
group has given to its project of nationwide armed “revolution”.[fn]“Myanmar’s
Rakhine torched anew by insurgent fire”, Asia Times, 3 January 2019.Hide Footnote Videos on social media tout the
group’s growing military prowess, including expensive weaponry that gives the
AA greater operational capabilities.[fn]See, for example, “Welcome to
the 9th anniversary of Arakan Army Day”, video, YouTube, 6 April
2018.Hide Footnote In addition to generating
grassroots support, the AA political leadership, particularly Tun Myat Naing,
has used social and mainstream media to articulate sophisticated political
positions that appeal to educated Rakhine. The group has also used fear as a
tactic, threatening township administrators and other government officials seen
as obstructing AA activities.[fn]Photos of threatening letters accompanied by
bullets sent to government officials regularly circulate on social media. The
AA does not deny sending them. See, for example, “AA issues threatening letters
to Rakhine police, village head”, The Irrawaddy, 22 December 2018.Hide Footnote
The 4 January attacks and government response have changed
the dynamic of armed conflict in Rakhine State by activating previously latent
support for the AA and bringing such support more into the open.
The NLD’s ascension to power has only aggravated the
underlying grievances.
The AA also has been actively recruiting in Rakhine State,
where young men who would once have opted to migrate from the area in search of
work opportunities are instead enlisting.[fn]Studies report that up to 80 per
cent of young people in some Rakhine State townships have migrated to other
states and regions in Myanmar or abroad, mostly to find jobs. See “IOM appeal
(Myanmar/Rakhine State) (April 2016-April 2018)”, International Organization
for Migration, 15 March 2016.Hide Footnote The large
Rakhine communities in Kachin State and Yangon are another important source of
fighters; the militia is quite openly using some Rakhine Buddhist monasteries
and Rakhine-owned businesses in Yangon, for example, as recruiting offices.[fn]Crisis
Group interview, political analyst involved in the peace process, Yangon,
January 2019.Hide Footnote Meanwhile, migrant workers
in Thailand and Malaysia are sending money to the AA, either through relatives
in Rakhine State or bank accounts in China, and the group often boasts of
donations from Rakhine business people.[fn]Crisis Group interviews, Rakhine
journalist and political analysts involved in the peace process, January 2019.Hide Footnote
Although the AA denies it, the group – like nearly all armed
groups in Myanmar – appears to be profiting from the drug trade. In early 2016,
the government said it had arrested an AA officer in Yangon, impounding large
quantities of weapons, ammunition and drugs.[fn]“How to fund a war – Arakan
Army officer arrested with guns, drugs in Yangon”, Global New Light of Myanmar,
28 February 2016.Hide Footnote A
record drug seizure of 2.67 tonnes of methamphetamine tablets the previous July
had been linked to Rakhine merchants.[fn]“Police searching for six suspects
over record US$106 million drug haul”, The Myanmar Times, 19 August 2015.Hide Footnote Most of the drugs are destined
for Bangladesh, but in Rakhine State, methamphetamine pills known as yaba have
also become much more widely available over the past two years. In some areas,
powdered yaba is now sold openly in a package with areca nut for as little as
25 U.S. cents.[fn]A whole tablet costs 4,000 Myanmar kyat, or around $2.50.
Crisis Group interview, Rakhine journalist, Yangon, January 2019.Hide Footnote
The 4 January attacks and government response have changed
the dynamic of armed conflict in Rakhine State by activating previously latent
support for the AA and bringing such support more into the open. Although
Rakhine communities may eventually tire of conflict and the negative
consequences it brings, in the short term such conflict and the military abuse
of civilians that invariably accompanies it will likely spur further backing
for the AA. The conflict has entered a dangerous new phase in which ethnic
divisions have more clearly been brought to the fore.
The consequences of a rift between Rakhine and Burman people
could be far-reaching, given that there is a quite prominent Rakhine elite
within national institutions, including military, government and civil service
as well as civil society and the Buddhist monkhood. Specific examples of how
this is already playing out are starting to be seen. When the upper Myanmar
branch of the influential Buddhist nationalist organisation MaBaTha issued a
statement condemning the 4 January attacks, the Rakhine branch responded by
questioning why it had said nothing when police shot seven Rakhine
demonstrators in Mrauk-U a year earlier.[fn]“Opinion statement”, MaBaTha (Upper
Myanmar), 6 January 2019, and “Objection statement”, MaBaTha (Rakhine State),
11 January 2019.Hide Footnote And as one
ethnic Rakhine journalist explained, even Rakhine in Yangon who interact with
ethnic Burmans on a daily basis are now publicly expressing their anger toward
the majority group, “so you can imagine what the feeling is like in areas that
are almost exclusively Rakhine”.[fn]Crisis Group interview, Rakhine journalist,
Yangon, January 2019.Hide Footnote
IV. Peace and Repatriation
The 4 January attacks present a fresh challenge for both
Myanmar’s national peace process and government plans to repatriate some of the
more than 800,000 Rohingya who have fled from Rakhine State to Bangladesh since
2016. The most immediate impact will be on the long-stalled peace process,
particularly the government’s efforts to convene a 21st Century Panglong Union
Peace Conference in February. This series of conferences would bring together
non-state armed groups that signed the 2015 Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement, the
military, the government, members of parliament, representatives of political
parties and civil society leaders in political dialogue aimed at drafting a
Union Peace Accord that would create a federal political system. A conference
is supposed to be held every six months, but since the NLD took office nearly
three years ago only three have taken place. Non-signatories, such as the AA,
can only attend as observers – if invited at all – and are not able to
participate in decision-making.
Prior to 4 January, new momentum appeared to be developing,
largely as a result of Chinese efforts to push the process forward in support
of its economic ambitions, manifest in the Belt and Road Initiative. On 12
December, the AA and Ta’ang National Liberation Army – together with a third
group, the ethnic Kokang Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army – said they
would halt military operations and wanted to solve their political conflicts
through dialogue. The government’s peace commission immediately accepted this
overture and shortly afterward the military announced its unilateral ceasefire.
Observers considered this development an important step forward, because for
several years the three groups had been on the fringes of the peace process due
to the military’s insistence that they surrender and disarm.[fn]Crisis Group
interview, political analyst involved in the peace process, Yangon, January
2019.Hide Footnote
Myanmar’s ethnic armed organisations can be broadly split
into two groups: those that have signed the 2015 Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement
and those that have not. Of the latter, seven (including the AA) are in a
coalition known as the Federal Political Negotiation and Consultative Committee
that the United Wa State Army set up in 2017.[fn]For detailed discussion, see
Crisis Group Asia Report N°287, Building Critical Mass for Peace in Myanmar, 29 June 2017.Hide Footnote The groups within this bloc
exhibit a high degree of solidarity and are unlikely to proceed with peace
negotiations if the AA is excluded as a result of the 4 January attacks.
Despite the government’s rhetoric about crushing the AA, it thus has little
choice but to seek negotiations with the group in the longer term.[fn]A similar
scenario played out after the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army’s
offensive in the Kokang region of Shan State in February 2015.Hide Footnote
Despite the strong negative sentiment the Rohingya issue arouses among
the ethnic Rakhine, the AA has taken a relatively moderate line.
Whether the AA will be willing to refrain from further
attacks in the short term is unclear. Tun Myat Naing’s increasingly bold
statements will make it politically difficult for him to agree to do so; if he
is seen as having been forced to back down it could undermine the AA’s growing
support. In recent weeks, Tun Myat Naing has also articulated a vision for
Rakhine State that the government could find difficult to accommodate within
the peace process. The nationwide ceasefire aims to establish a democratic
federal union, with more political power devolved to ethnic minority areas. But
Tun Myat Naing has called for what he describes as “confederate” status for
Rakhine State, under which it would have almost complete autonomy, except in
defence, trade regulation and foreign affairs.[fn]“Confederation the only
option for Arakanese people, AA chief says”, The Irrawaddy, 11 January 2019.Hide Footnote
The 4 January attacks will also further complicate the
government’s hopes for beginning the long-delayed repatriation of thousands of
Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh.[fn]See Crisis Group Asia Briefing N°153, Bangladesh-Myanmar: The Danger of Forced Repatriation, 12
November 2018.Hide Footnote
Despite the strong negative sentiment the Rohingya issue
arouses among the ethnic Rakhine, the AA has taken a relatively moderate line,
suggesting that the government promptly grant citizenship rights to those who
are repatriated if they are found to be eligible under the 1982 Citizenship
Law.[fn]“AA leader dismisses ‘ridiculous’ claim that his group has ties to
ARSA”, The Irrawaddy, 11 April 2018. For detailed discussion of the 1982
Citizenship Law, see Crisis Group Report, The Politics of Rakhine State, op. cit., pp. 10-11.Hide Footnote Citizenship rights would in
theory allow the repatriated Rohingya to move freely around the country, for
instance migrating to large cities in search of jobs. For decades, most
Rohingya have been issued only temporary identity papers instead of citizenship
documents, conferring them fewer rights and strictly limiting travel within Myanmar.
Many ethnic Rakhine consider this restriction on the Rohingya to be an unfair
burden on themselves as well, because it means the Rohingya have no option but
to compete with them for employment and resources in Rakhine State. The AA’s
line thus reflects the formal position of many Rakhine politicians.[fn]See
Crisis Group Report, The Politics of Rakhine State, op. cit., pp. 14-18.Hide Footnote The subtext is that both the
Rakhine and Rohingya are victims of the Burman-controlled state, and that
focusing on each other plays into the central government’s divide-and-rule
tactics.
The instability generated as a result of the 4 January
attacks and any subsequent fighting in the months ahead will diminish the
already slim chances of repatriation getting underway. Security restrictions,
particularly on access for UN agencies and NGOs, will alarm any Rohingya
possibly considering returning under the repatriation scheme, and could result
in further hardship for the estimated 200,000 who have stayed behind in
northern Rakhine State. Regardless of the AA’s position, the ethno-nationalist
sentiment whipped up among ethnic Rakhine will also create further caution
among potential returnees, many of whom have already objected to coming back
due to security concerns and lack of clarity over citizenship.[fn]“Repatriation
plan stalls as Rohingya refuse to return to Myanmar”, Catholic News Service, 15
November 2018.Hide Footnote
V. Conclusion
The AA attacks on 4 January were a provocative step that
asserted the group’s growing military capabilities and popular support among
Rakhine people. There is a serious risk that an escalatory dynamic takes hold,
which could plunge the state deeper into armed conflict. Preventing escalation
will require the AA to refrain from further attacks, and the government and
military to resist the urge to retaliate politically and militarily. Escalation
would fuel support for the AA and reinforce ethnic divisions between the
Rakhine and the Burman majority. The military should exercise restraint in its
“clearance operations”, avoiding the harm to civilians that regularly mars its
counter-insurgency activity, and expand the unilateral ceasefire to encompass
Rakhine State. The government should make overtures to the AA through informal
channels and encourage other peace stakeholders with leverage over the AA to
bring the ethnic Rakhine insurgents to the negotiating table. Further, all
sides should avoid rhetoric that could further inflame ethnic tensions.
The government needs to begin a genuine and inclusive
dialogue with the Rakhine people.
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