Oct 27, 2009

Ben's History of Burma Notes!

Ancient History
- region has been inhabited for about 11,000 years
- the last independent dynasty was the Konbaung, who unify Burma by 1758 and came to border British India by 1819


Colonization
- First Anglo-Burmese War (1824-6) is instigated by cross-border raiding and cripples the Konbaung dynasty
- Burma becomes a province of British India in 1886 following gradual annexation
- Burmese economy grows due to new agricultural demand from opening the Suez canal (1869), but wealth generally remains with the British and Indian mirants. (roots of economic strife)
- Unlike most British territories, the civil service and military are staffed almost entirely by Anglo-Burmese and Indians rather than natives (problems w/ rule of law)


Nationalism
- Begins in early 1900s with Young Men's Buddhist Associations by Burmese leaders educated in Britain
- In 1920s, constitution is reformed to create a limited legislature, more autonomy from India, and greater Burmese representation in the Civil Service (grudging devolution?)
- 1920s: strike and protests against British begin, led by monks and university students
- 1937 Britain separates Burma from India and creates fully elected assembly
- Communist Party of Burma founded in 1939 by Aung San
- Communists initially support Japanese invasion in 1942 in hopes of gaining independence, but 1944 unite with socialist groups to form Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League and fight with British


Independence
- Postwar, Burma is reoccupied by the British, but the largely socialist AFPFL retains significant power and opposes the colonial government
- Burmese Executive Council, with AFPFL representation, negotiates for independence in 1947; conservative and communist branches of AFPFL are dissatisfied
- AFPFL, led by a moderated Aung San and the socialists, wins overwhelmingly in national elections 1947 in 197
- U Saw, conservative colonial prime minister (1940 to 1942) orders Aung San and other cabinet members assasinated
- Formal independence occurs on January 4, 1948; U Nu is first prime minister


Post-Independence
- By 1958, U NU's AFPFL begins to splinter.
- After barely surviving no confidence vote U Nu invites Army Chief of Staff General Ne Win to take over a caretaker govt from 1958-60
-new elections return U Nu's AFPFL faction to power in 1960


Overthrow
- March 2 1962: Ne Win and other senior military officers overthrow U Nu and put him in "protective custody"
- U Nu is released from prison 1966; forms Parliamentary Democracy Party in exile
- Ne Win founds Burmese Socialist Programme Party (BSPP) in July, with the ideology of the "Burmese Way to Socialism"
- Burmese Way To Socialism distinguishes itself from both communists and social democrats: "an amalgam of Buddhist and Marxist illogic"
- Pursues disastrous economic policies: nationalizes industries; incorporates severe autarky
- Opposition parties are banned 1964; requires indoctrination training for civil servants and includes mandatory youth wing.
- Military selectorate within communist chairman/central committee/central executive committee structure
- periodic uprising occur, most notably in 1974 over inflation, food shortages, and the death of former U Nu advisor U Thant
the value of banknotes not divisible by 9 in 1987, eliminating people's savings
- United Nations gives Burma Least Developed Country status 1987, prompting governments to require farmers to sell produce below market price


8888 Uprising
- Halting economic reforms characterize 1987-8 after UN gives Burma Least Developed Country Status (consistent with revolutions)
- Ne Win destabilizes economy by canceling banknotes and requiring farmers to sell below market price
- March 1988, democracy protests begin at Rangoon Institute of Technology with protests over favorable treatment of the son of a BSPP official arrested in a fight; protests spread and universities are closed
- Protests continue through July 1988, when Ne Win resigns, promises multiparty democracy, and appints Sein Lwin to head new government
- Nationwide protests occur starting august 1st; martial law is imposed; general strike begins August 8, particularly in Rangoon (chaos reigns) and Mandalay (organized protests by elites); military responds with lethal force (certainty)
- Sein Lwin resigns August 12 and is replaced with a civilian, Maung Maung, who briefly placates protestors,
- Aung San Suu Kyi addresses a large crow on August 26, encouraging peaceful rather than violent means towards change.
- BSPP delegates approve multiparty system of government in September, but protests resume after it insists on conducting the election itself
- On September 18, the BSPP is overthrown by General Saw Maung and the State Law and Order Restoration Council


Current Government
- SLORC kills protestors en masse, suspend 1974 constitution
- SLORC intiailly continues economic reforms and revises constitution, announcing elections to be held in 1990
- NLD  wins elections over the National Unity Party (successor to BSPP), but SLORC does not acknowledge results
- U Nu, Aung San Suu Kyi, and others are imprisoned
- Than Shwe replaces Saw Maung 1992 - cosmetic change does not effect institutionalized norms
- After negotiations with NLD over new constitution collapse in 1995-6, goernment cracks down on NLD
- State Peace and Development Council replaces SLORC 1998; consists of 11-member military junta but does not change policy
- Relocates capital from Yangon to Naypidaw in 2005 to avoid protests
- In February 2008, SPDC announces that elections will be held by 2010, and holds constitutional referendum in 2008


Recent Activities
- August 2007: protests caused by removal of government fuel subsidies, "Saffron Revolution", lead by Buddhist monks and dealt with harshly after initial tolerance
- Cyclone Nargis (May 2008): government refuses international relief efforts

Oct 26, 2009

Ta Da! We have a blog!

Okey dokey then! Howdy everyone! Welcome to the first post for American University's Fall 2009 semester's alternative break to Thailand, aka "The Thai/Burma Border" trip. So, a little information for all involved parties:

If we want to change the title of the blog (which I personally wouldn't mind), let's hear some suggestions!

Currently the blog is operated through an e-mail address of mine. We could change it so that we have a kind of community address so we can all update the blog as we please. Or if someone wants something to be posted on the blog, they could just send me the information and I'll post it for the group.

How creative/involved would we like this to be? We could each have little profile pictures and descriptions of ourselves (and use that for advertising purposes I guess?), or we could leave it pretty sparse and just use it to connect our group together. In other words, what exactly do we want the purpose of this blog to be?

Also, whoever's got the minutes, at least for tonight, please e-mail them to me and I'll start posting them!

Anne K Lynch