NYT: Years After Coup, Myanmar’s Government in Exile Teeters on Irrelevance
After the Myanmar military overthrew
the elected government five years ago, politicians and civic leaders opposed to
the junta formed a pro-democracy group that they hoped would be the country’s
sole legitimate representative on the global stage.
They set up offices in places like
Washington and London, and in some restive parts of Myanmar. They raised
millions and pledged to field an army comprising various ethnic and rebel
groups. They called themselves a shadow government and set up ministries. They
chose a name that reflected their ambitions: the National Unity Government of
Myanmar.
But this diffuse shadow government,
with most of its members in exile, has had few major successes. It has failed
to reverse international apathy toward the military’s brutal crackdown, which
has left at least 7,700 dead since
the junta usurped power on Feb. 1, 2021. It does not have full control of the
local rebel groups and ethnic armies on the battlefield, where the resistance
has made significant gains against the military government.
Now, as the junta is poised to put up
what it calls a civilian government after a stage-managed election, the
National Unity Government is looking increasingly irrelevant. Kyee Myint,
one of Myanmar’s most prominent human rights lawyers, said the shadow
government operated more like a civil society organization than a revolutionary
one.
“They are disconnected from what the
people actually want,” said Mr. Kyee Myint, 80.
The military, which has ruled Myanmar
for most of its post-colonial history, remains ensconced in cities and controls
just about half of the nation’s territory. Last year, the leader, Senior Gen.
Min Aung Hlaing, announced that the military government would hold elections.
But most opposition politicians, including the ones the junta deposed, are
jailed, remain barred from politics or are in hiding.
The elections were held in three
phases, only in areas under military control, and concluded last Sunday. They
were widely derided as a sham and are expected to produce as the winner a
political party that is a proxy for the junta.
The shadow government, which has been
deemed illegal by the military, called for a boycott of the
vote. Voter turnout was 54.1 percent, according to the military, the
lowest in decades. The N.U.G. said actual turnout in urban centers like Yangon
and Mandalay was most likely closer to 20 percent. David Scott Mathieson,
an independent analyst on Myanmar, said the military had used the election to
successfully shift the political ground and create a new reality that the
shadow government failed to counter effectively.
Despite the polls being a “farcical
process,” the regime established a semblance of procedure that allowed it to
dictate the political agenda, Mr. Mathieson said. It bet on “widespread apathy”
in urban areas, understanding that many exhausted civilians will vote simply so
officials will leave them alone, he added. The N.U.G. literally couldn’t
see that the ground was shifting beneath its feet,” Mr. Mathieson said.
Detractors say there is virtually no
leadership within the shadow government, which is helmed by an acting
president, Duwa Lashi La, and prime minister, Mahnn Win Khaing Than. Meetings
are held over Zoom to discuss issues like responding to an election they call a
sham but have few answers to.
Globally, the government in exile has
at least 11 “representative offices,” but Myanmar’s biggest neighbors — China,
India and Thailand — do not recognize it.
At the American headquarters of the
National Unity Government of Myanmar, in Washington in 2023.Credit...Kenny
Holston/The New York Times
Like many others, Mr. Kyee Myint was
an early supporter of the group.
It had proposed a fundamental reset
of Myanmar’s society by ending the dominance of the Bamar-majority ethnic
group. It said it wanted to include a diverse set of ethnic leaders to create a
truly inclusive state. It notched some early wins when it raised tens of
millions of dollars to fund its war efforts. Now Mr. Kyee Myint is one of
the shadow government’s most outspoken critics. Chief among his list of
complaints is what he says is its lack of financial transparency, which he says
prevents resources from reaching fighters on the ground.
He pointed to a case in November when
the permanent secretary of the prime minister’s office was accused of nepotism,
corruption and misuse of authority. She was suspended, but the results of the
investigation have not been disclosed.
Daw Zin Mar Aung, the shadow
government’s foreign minister, said the group was trying its best. “We started
from zero,” she said, speaking by telephone from an undisclosed location.
Criticism, she said, should be
constructive, to “support and encourage us to move forward.”
“We really understand the suffering
of our people,” she added. But in parts of Myanmar, where the fighting is
most intense, rebels say they are not getting the funds that they need from the
National Unity Government. A battalion commander for the People’s Defense
Forces, a group of civilians who took up arms after the coup, based in Mandalay
said his troops were surviving by relying on donations.
Tint Zaw Hein, who founded a group to
raise funds for doctors and teachers who have joined nonviolent protests, said
he had met some fighters throughout central Myanmar who say that they have only
50 to 100 bullets left. He criticized the shadow government as failing to
see how long the civil war would take.
“You can’t change the country from
outside the country,” he said.
Soldiers of the People’s Defense
Forces, rebels who have taken up arms against the military, patrolling in Karen
State, Myanmar, in 2022.Credit...Adam Dean for The New York Times
Nay Phone Latt, a spokesman for the
shadow government, said it was in discussions with other revolutionary forces,
including the ethnic armed groups, to come together under a new alliance.
Mr. Nay Phone Latt acknowledged that
the National Unity Government could not fully equip everyone with weapons, “but
it is not the case that we have abandoned them without any support,” he said.
He added, “While it is true that we
have not achieved 100 percent success, it would be an exaggeration to say that
nothing has been achieved.”
Last year, Tayzar San, one of
Myanmar’s most prominent pro-democracy activists, set off a furor when he wrote
on social media that he was “completely dissatisfied with the N.U.G.’s
performance.”
A physician who is often described as
Myanmar’s most wanted man for his opposition to the junta, Dr. Tayzar San said
the shadow government needed stronger leadership and that it was time for the
group to accelerate its efforts for reform.
In December, in response to growing
criticism, the National Unity Government reduced the number of ministries from
17 to 12. But Dr. Tayzar San said the people of Myanmar were “still waiting for
more effective, practical changes” such as the strengthening of local
governments in the Sagaing, Mandalay and Magway regions, the epicenter of the
armed struggle against the junta.
Image
A camp for displaced people that was
destroyed by Myanmar’s military in 2024.Credit...Adam Ferguson for The New York
Times
Still, Dr. Tayzar San said it was not
practical to fully replace the shadow government, which is active in defense,
education and health in much of central Myanmar. He cautioned that toppling one
of the world’s most entrenched military dictatorships would take time.
“It’s not that the N.U.G. isn’t
working at all,” Dr. Tayzar San said. “It’s just not meeting the people’s
expectations.”
Sui-Lee Wee is
the Southeast Asia bureau chief for The Times, overseeing coverage of 11
countries in the region.
A version of this article appears in
print on Feb. 2, 2026, Section A, Page 4 of the New York
edition with the headline: Myanmar’s Shadow Government Struggles in
Battle and in Politics. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
Comments
Post a Comment