- 2021-07-31 08:46:56
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-25 15:30:17
Myanmar leaders use pandemic as political weapon
Photo: Collected
International Desk: Dhaka, Jul-31,
With coronavirus deaths rising in Myanmar, allegations are growing from residents and human rights activists that the military government, which seized control in February, is using the pandemic to consolidate power and crush opposition.
In the last week, the per capita death rate in
Myanmar surpassed those of Indonesia and Malaysia to become the worst in
Southeast Asia. The country’s crippled health care system has rapidly become
overwhelmed with new patients sick with COVID-19.
Supplies of medical oxygen are running low, and the
government has restricted its private sale in many places, saying it is trying
to prevent hoarding. But that has led to widespread allegations that the stocks
are being directed to government supporters and military-run hospitals.
At the same time, medical workers have been targeted
after spearheading a civil disobedience movement that urged professionals and
civil servants not to cooperate with the government, known as the State
Administrative Council.
“They have stopped distributing personal protection
equipment and masks, and they will not let civilians who they suspect are
supporting the democracy movement be treated in hospitals, and they’re
arresting doctors who support the civil disobedience movement,” said Yanghee
Lee, the U.N.’s former Myanmar human rights expert and a founding member of the
Special Advisory Council for Myanmar.
“With the oxygen, they have banned sales to
civilians or people who are not supported by the SAC, so they’re using
something that can save the people against the people,” she said. “The military
is weaponizing COVID.”
Myanmar’s Deputy Information Minister Zaw Min Tun
did not respond to questions about the allegations, but with growing internal
and external pressure to get the pandemic under control, the leadership has
been on a public relations offensive.
In the
state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper this week, several articles
highlighted the government’s efforts, including what it called a push to resume
vaccinations and increase oxygen supplies.
Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the military commander
who heads the SAC, was cited as saying that efforts were also being made to
seek support from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and unspecified
“friendly countries.”
“Efforts must be made for ensuring better health of
the State and the people,” he was quoted as saying.
Myanmar reported another 342 deaths Thursday, and
5,234 new infections. Its 7-day rolling average of deaths per 1 million people
rose to 6.29 — more than double the rate of 3.04 in India at the peak of its
crisis in May. The figures in Myanmar are thought to be a drastic undercount
due to lack of testing and reporting.
“There is a big difference between the actual death
toll from COVID-19 of the Military Council and reality,” a physician from the
Mawlamyine General Hospital in Myanmar’s fourth-largest city told The
Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of government
reprisal. “There are a lot of people in the community who have died of the
disease and cannot be counted.”
Videos proliferate on social media showing apparent
virus victims dead in their homes for lack of treatment and long lines of
people waiting for what oxygen supplies are still available. The government
denies reports that cemeteries in Yangon have been overwhelmed but announced
Tuesday they were building new facilities that could cremate up to 3,000 bodies
per day.
“By letting COVID-19 run out of control, the
military junta is failing the Burmese people as well as the wider region and
world, which can be threatened by new variants fueled by unchecked spread of
the disease in places like Myanmar,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director
of Human Rights Watch. “The problem is the junta cares more about holding on to
power than stopping the pandemic.”
Myanmar is one of the region’s poorest countries and
already was in a vulnerable position when the military seized power, triggering
a violent political struggle.
Under the civilian former leader Aung San Suu Kyi,
Myanmar had weathered a coronavirus surge last year by severely restricting
travel and sealing off Yangon. Vaccines were secured from India and China, but
Suu Kyi’s government was ousted less than a week after the first shots were
given.
As civil disobedience grew after Suu Kyi’s removal,
public hospitals were basically closed as doctors and other staff refused to
work under the new administration, instead running makeshift clinics for which
they faced arrest, if caught.
Some have returned to public hospitals, but the
Mawlamyine doctor interviewed by AP said it was too dangerous.
“I could be arrested by the junta anytime if I
returned to the hospital,” added the doctor, who was part of the disobedience
movement and has been treating patients with supplies he has scrounged.
Acco rding to Tom Andrews, the U.N. Human Rights
Council’s independent expert on human rights in Myanmar, government forces have
engaged in at least 260 attacks on medical personnel and facilities, killing
18. At least 67 health care professionals had been detained and another 600 are
being sought.
Military hospitals kept operating after Suu Kyi’s
ouster but were shunned by many people and the vaccination program slowed to a
crawl before apparently fizzling out completely until this week. There are no
solid figures on vaccinations, but it’s believed that about 3% of the
population could have received two shots.
The rapid rise in COVID -19 illnesses is “extremely
concerning, particularly with limited availability of health services and
oxygen supplies,” said Joy Singhal, head of the Red Cross’ Myanmar delegation.
“There is an urgent need for greater testing,
contact tracing and COVID-19 vaccinations to help curb the pandemic,” he told
AP. “This latest surge is a bitter blow to millions of people in Myanmar
already coping with worsening economic and social hardships.”
Earlier this week, Andrews urged the U.N. Security
Council and member states to push for a “COVID cease-fire.”
“The United Nations cannot afford to be complacent
while the junta ruthlessly attacks medical personnel as COVID-19 spreads
unchecked,” he said. “They must act to end this violence so that doctors and
nurses can provide lifesaving care and international organizations can help
deliver vaccinations and related medical care.”
After a long lull in humanitarian aid, China
recently began delivering vaccines. It sent 736,000 doses to Yangon this month,
the first of 2 million being donated, and reportedly more than 10,000 to the
Kachin Independence Army, which has waged a decades-long insurgency in a
northern border area where the virus has spilled over into China.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian
declined to comment directly earlier this week on the report of the delivery to
the KIA, noting instead “the epidemic is a common enemy to all mankind.”
The Global New Light reported Myanmar received
another 1 million doses purchased from China.
COVID-19 outbreaks have been reported as widespread
in Myanmar’s prisons. On Wednesday, state-run MRTV television showed what it
said were 610 prisoners from Yangon’s Insein Prison being vaccinated. The
report was met with skepticism and derision on social media.
Lee said if the government is trying to use vaccines
and other aid to its advantage by positioning itself as the solution to the
pandemic, it’s too late.
“The people know now and it’s been too long,” she
said. “COVID was not manmade but it got out of proportion because of complicity
and deliberate blockage of services — there’s no going back.”
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