Questions around investments in Mon State are heating up these days. The Economic Affairs Reviewing Committee of the Mon State Parliament has announced that, within the next few months, all investments within the state will come under official inspection. As Dr. Aung Naing Oo, Vice-Chair of the Mon State Parliament, explained, this inspection is coming about due to concerns about the recent inflow of investments to the state. “Although the Union Parliament allowed permissions, those businesses should be reviewed whether they were beneficial for the Mon State,” he said.1
The favourable position of the Union Parliament towards investments mirrors that of the National League for Democracy (NLD) government. Addressing the people of Mon State in a speech at Mawlamyine University last year, State Counsellor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi proclaimed: “Mon is poor, so you should welcome investments in order to secure development.”2
This analysis is also in tune with recent calls from the State Counsellor for increased investments into the country more generally. A week after the inspection announcement by the Mon State Parliament, Aung San Suu Kyi declared on the eve of the 33rd ASEAN-meeting: “We have land, we have good young working population, we have many unexplored resources.”3 Most recently, the State Counsellor was even more bold in the attempt to entice investors at the Invest Myanmar Summit 2019. “As Southeast Asia’s final frontier market – final and best – we offer a world of opportunities,” she said. “Investment opportunities are everywhere in Myanmar; some are there to be seen, and others are waiting to be found.”4
Such announcements, however, appear undeterred by the many ongoing conflicts around investments across the country. For people living on the ground, such statements are difficult to square with their daily realities. The implications of the recent surge in investments are especially the case for those affected by projects that target “land” and so-called “unexplored resources”.
Many communities in Mon State are deeply worried. Indeed, across town from where Aung San Suu Kyi was delivering her Mawlamyine speech last June, a workshop brought together coastal and inland villagers as well as civil society organisations that are working in Mon State. Here the tone and approach to investments was markedly different. In the view of participants, many of these investments – far from securing development – have been a destructive force. Access to – and control of – the natural resources upon which their livelihoods depend are being radically reshaped by these new projects. Equally concerning, people are increasingly fearful for their lives as a result of their resistance towards the very same investments that the State Counsellor is urging them to welcome.
As a result, views of the role of investments in Mon State have become more polarised as the territory has been opened up to increased investment. This polarization, participants at the workshop stressed, has been exacerbated with the signing by the New Mon State Party (NMSP) of the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement with the government in February 2018.5 The consequences for local communities have been profound. Today villagers find themselves fighting against coalitions of either the union government and the business “cronies” or the NMSP and the business “cronies”. In short, they are without representation and very often have to fend for themselves.
In response, valiant attempts at organizing and mobilizing around an alternative vision of development are taking place. But the question remains as to whether these can keep pace with the steady stream of projects that are flooding into the state.
In this light, the inspection plans by the Mon State Parliament are timely and appear as good news. There is certainly plenty to dig into.
NMSP, the ceasefire process and the “cronies”
They talk about peace, but what is behind that?
-Villager, 14 June 2018
Coercive enforcement of “peace” and “development” is nothing new in Mon State. The current version of “peace” came to Mon State after the NMSP joined the “second round” of ceasefires in the mid-1990s, which were made between several members of the National Democratic Front and the then military government of the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC).6 Following a brutal military offensive in the early 1990s, the military regime shifted strategy in 1993 under Snr-Gen. Than Shwe’s leadership and embarked on so-called “peace tours” around the country, including to Mon State. On these tours, the ethnic armed organisations (EAOs) were invited “to return quickly to the legal fold after considering the good of the government. We extend our invitation with genuine goodwill. We do not have any malicious thoughts.”7
Such words, however, do not convey the whole story. In reality, this “invitation” was backed up by tangible pressures from the military government, very often in coalition with the authorities in neighbouring Thailand. For the NMSP, the pressure from Thailand was especially palpable.
Following the ending of the Cold War, the Thai government radically shifted its strategies towards neighbouring states, pursuing an aim of turning “battlefields into market places”. In Myanmar, this paved the way for a series of economic projects that were intended to unfold close to, or inside, NMSP territory. As a result, the Thai government took part in pressuring the NMSP to the negotiation table. This approach was a change from its historical tacit acceptance or support for the EAOs along the border. In the post-Cold War era, the economic benefits of integrating these borderland spaces into the regional circuits of capital outweighed political considerations that had been uppermost in the past.
As Tom Kramer summed it up, for Bangkok-based policy-makers the “liberated areas” were no longer seen as a “buffer-zone” against creeping communism in the region but as an “obstacle to regional economic development”.8 In or around Mon State, the integration of the “liberated areas” was to happen through a series of large-scale projects: notably, the controversial Yadana gas pipeline,9 a deep seaport at Dawei (which never came to fruition, but plans are resurfacing today), and a road to Thailand from Mawlamyine supported by the Asian Development Bank as part of its Greater Mekong Subregion-corridor.10
At this moment of change, the NMSP’s unwillingness to enter into negotiations with the military government in Myanmar were seen by the authorities in Thailand as a hindrance to these economic projects. In consequence, the Thai military applied pressure on Mon communities in the borderlands by threatening to force 10,000 refugees back into NMSP-administered territory just at the very moment the Myanmar armed forces were also exerting pressures on EAOs on the other side of the frontier. Finally, the fall of the headquarters of the Karen National Union further north on the Thai border in early 1995 helped convince the NMSP of the need for negotiation. This led to the conclusion of the NMSP ceasefire with the Myanmar government on 29 June 1995.
With the signing of the ceasefire agreement, the NMSP’s territorial control was radically curtailed. In the following years, the organisation largely shifted its strategy towards education of the Mon people and supporting different community development projects, while attempting to promote political change in the country at large. In terms of political reform, it was a long and largely vain wait.
Meanwhile, as the Than Shwe regime pursued ethnic ceasefires, the peace process facilitated the rise of a small group of business “cronies” that helped entrench the military in government. The term “cronies” is defined by Lee Jones as “a state-linked oligarchic elite which enjoys considerable economic dominance and close relations with military and state officials”.11 During the 1990s and 2000s, this small group became powerfully positioned to dictate the terms of Myanmar’s future development. This trend became especially important after President Thein Sein took office in a quasi-civilian system of government in 2011. This was followed by the current period of ceasefires, EAO demobilisation and Aung San Suu Kyi’s formal ascent to government office in 2016. As Lee Jones noted: “With the military’s retreat from direct political power, Myanmar’s crony capitalists are poised to exercise considerable influence over the trajectory of reform.”12
For communities on the ground in Mon State and throughout the country, these arbitrary and unregulated processes of change have been felt by a wave of new extractive and exploitative projects by which business cronies are gaining access to all types of natural resources. At the same time, they are disrupting and destroying livelihoods and previous modes of existence for many peoples. While the NMSP’s signing of the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement was celebrated at an official press conference in Nay Pyi Taw, it tragically seems that the main beneficiaries of these government changes so far have been the cronies. Under this new situation, both the Union Government and the NMSP seem eager to link up with the cronies, but with unconsidered and dire consequences for local villagers.
Mon resources: for lives and livelihoods or profit?
One contemporary case is a cluster of villages around Magyi, Ye township, in the southernmost part of the coast in Mon State. For decades, this area was characterized by the military government as a “black area”. In official-speak, this means not under central control and, as a result, fair game for military intervention and human rights abuses towards villagers who are suspected of allegiance toward the NMSP.13 Despite the NMSP’s 1995 ceasefire and NCA signing, however, villagers here are still under pressure from both the Myanmar armed forces and an armed NMSP-splinter group that regularly takes villagers as hostages for ransom. This happens if they manage to capture anyone alone or in small groups in their cash-crop gardens around the villages. Many parts of Myanmar remain highly militarised today.
Having said this, the general landscape in Mon State and adjoining territories in southeast Myanmar is more peaceful than it was before the EAO ceasefires. This has come at a cost, however, because “peace” has meant an increasing pressure from cronies and powerful business interests who want to gain access to land and natural resources in and around the villages.