You may have heard we have a little problem with a former postal
clerk in Burma. Before joining the army in the early 1950s the young
man delivered letters and packages to people in central Burma. We
should assume then that as a messenger of the state he learned to
appreciate the importance most people put on communication and the
social grace to respond in kind when someone corresponds with you.
Now
head of Burma's military junta, Snr-Gen Than Shwe must receive a lot of
mail: official transcripts, secret reports and dossiers, military
analysis, international dispatches, petitions, even birthday cards from
his relatives.
Detained Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition
leader Aung San Suu Kyi sent two letters to the military dictator in
September and November last year. In those letters, we are told, she
expressed her willingness to sit down and talk with him. As a further
gesture, she indicated that she wanted to work with him to achieve
national reconciliation and to discuss a strategy to encourage Western
nations to lift sanctions on the country. (I understand that Suu Kyi
cannot request the US and the EU to lift sanctions unless she is freed
along with other political prisoners, and a meaningful political
process is seen to be in progress.)
I believe the olive branch
that The Lady offered to Than Shwe was an opportunity for him to open a
dialogue with the opposition and a gift-wrapped invitation to help
untangle Burma from its international isolation.
The former postal clerk did not respond to her letters.
Suu
Kyi was gracious and did not give in. In her second letter, she
repeatedly expressed her gratitude to Than Shwe (perhaps hoping that
flattery would sooth his stubborn ego) in spite of her extended house
arrest and the bogus trial he subjected her to last year.
Like a spoilt child sent to his room, Than Shwe remained defiant by demonstrating a sullen silence.
Suu
Kyi tried another tack––she asked the regime leader to allow her to
meet with three senior leaders from her National League for Democracy
(NLD) party. This time, her wish was granted and she was able to meet
with and pay respect to the ailing veterans at a government guest
house. However, she was not allowed to meet all the party's senior
leaders.
I guess Than Shwe must be reading her letters, after all.
This
is not the first time the junta strongman has been lost for words when
dealing with Suu Kyi. Almost a year after her convoy was brutally
ambushed in Depayin in May 2003, she sent a letter to Than Shwe stating
that the NLD was ready to work with the government. But the former
mail-boy refused to reply.
Suu Kyi's courage, selflessness and humanity contrasted starkly with Than Shwe's immaturity, pettiness and malice.
As
if it were a noble gesture, Than Shwe this week magnanimously granted
the detained opposition leader a meeting with her lawyers to discuss
her upcoming appeal against the extension of her house arrest (as if
the rule of law actually existed in Burma), and to address a petty
objection by her estranged brother to her performing repairs on her
lakeside home.
It is therefore clear that Than Shwe reads the
letters he receives from the NLD leader. We can imagine him sweating
with nerves as he opens the envelope, brooding over her words, his face
turning dark with jealousy and fear when he realizes yet again that he
is no match for her. He will ponder for days how he can respond to the
Nobel Peace Prize laureate. Lost for words, he will sink into silence.
This
year, Than Shwe will probably receive more letters from Aung San Suu
Kyi. But we wonder whether the former mail-boy will ever get the
message.