In Burma, Internal Spy Network Lives On
TODD PITMAN / AP WRITER,
Monday, July 29, 2013
MANDALAY — It’s been two years since Burma’s new government promised
its people a more open way of life, but still they come, plainclothes
state intelligence officers asking where former student activist Mya Aye
is and when he’ll back.
Politicians, journalists, writers, diplomats, too, find themselves
being watched: Men on motorcycles tailing closely. The occasional phone
call. The same, familiar faces at crowded street cafes.
“It’s not as bad as it used to be,” said Mya Aye, who devotes much of
his time today campaigning for citizen’s rights, “but it’s really
annoying. They act like we’re criminals, harassing us, our families.
It’s disrespectful and intimidating. It shouldn’t be this way anymore.”
Mya Aye was one of the student leaders of a failed uprising in 1988
against the repressive military junta that ruled for nearly five decades
and employed a colossal network of intelligence agents to crack down on
dissent.
In years past, he and thousands of other dissidents were hauled off
to jail, instilling widespread fear in the hearts of a downtrodden
population to ensure that nobody spoke out.
The level of oppression has eased markedly since President Thein
Sein, a former army general, took office in 2011 after an
opposition-boycotted election. But while many political prisoners have
been released, newspapers are no longer censored and freedom of speech
has largely become a reality, the government has not ceased spying on
its own people.
“Old habits die hard,” said lawmaker Win Htein of the opposition
National League for Democracy party, who spent nearly 20 years in prison
during the military reign. He spoke to The Associated Press by
telephone in a conversation he feared was being tapped by police.
Every day, six to eight officers from various security departments
can be seen at a tea shop across the street from the opposition party
headquarters, jotting down who comes and goes and snapping the
occasional picture.
It is unknown how many intelligence agents are active nationwide, but
at least two major information gathering services are still operating:
the Office of Military Affairs Security and the notorious Special Branch
police, which reports to the Ministry of Home Affairs.
A well-connected, middle-ranking officer, speaking on condition he
not be named because he didn’t have authorization to talk to the media,
said there are no top-down orders these days to follow a particular
individual. Young, often-inexperienced agents instead are told to keep
tabs on new faces or unusual movement in their “patch,” and then inform
their bosses.
And so they do, often in crude or comic fashion, with little or no effort to be discreet.
When Associated Press journalists went to the city of Meikhtila to
inspect a neighborhood destroyed by sectarian violence earlier this
year, the watchers were everywhere, two men trailing close behind on
motorcycles.
Yet more waited outside the hotel in Mandalay as the reporting team
tried to find ways to lose them – finally entering a crowded temple and
then slipping out the back – so they could interview massacre survivors
so worried of being harassed by authorities that they would not even
speak in their own homes.
Presidential spokesman Ye Htut insisted those days are over: “Special
Branch is no longer monitoring on journalists.” Asked to comment
further, he said the story is “based on false assumptions,” so he could
not.
Human Rights Watch says intelligence gathering services tortured
prisoners and detainees during military rule by using sleep deprivation
or kicking and beating some of them until they lost consciousness.
During another failed uprising, the 2007 monk-led Saffron Revolution,
Special Branch officers videotaped and photographed protests, and then
used the images to identify and detain thousands of people.
There are still reports of arrest, detention and sometimes torture,
said David Mathieson, an expert on Burma for New York-based Human Rights
Watch, but the number of incidents has fallen sharply, in part because
activist groups and media report them when they happen.
State intelligence is still tracking targets out of “habit and
continued paranoia,” he said. “The secret police are often the last
people to embrace a transition, especially when so many of their past
victims and opponents, such as former political prisoners and activists,
are a central component of the transition and reform process.”
“The challenges for them now are that there are far more people to
monitor, Burmese and foreigners, and a much less certain mission and
confused political program,” he said. “Before 2011, the police, courts
and military could use the rule of law to intimidate their opponents,
cow journalists and throw critics in prison. They don’t have a
green-light to do this anymore, so they have to be careful.”
Land rights activist Win Cho has his own way of dealing with the problem: He informs on himself.
“I just tell them everything I’m going to do,” he said. He often
travels outside the city of Rangoon to advocate for farmers who are
fighting against land grabs by the rich and powerful. “If we’re having a
protest, I call the Special Branch and tell them where, when and how.
Then they don’t bother following me. They know everything already.”
Local police also employ their own intelligence agents. One who
followed the AP journalists in Meikhtila acknowledged following Win
Htein in the same city in recent months, though he declined to say why.
The opposition lawmaker had been critical of the failure of police and
authorities to rein in sectarian violence there.
When an AP team visited a Muslim neighborhood in the western city of
Sittwe, half a dozen police carrying assault rifles followed every step
of the way, writing down everything they heard in notebooks. Police
officers also appeared during interviews at camps for those displaced by
sectarian violence – and sometimes afterward, asking whom the
journalists had spoken to and what they asked.
Earlier this year, an obligatory three-man escort from the police
anti-drug division, the Central Committee for Drug Abuse Control, tagged
along when an AP team traveled with the UN drug agency through the
rugged mountains of eastern Shan state.
They said they were there for the journalists’ safety in a region
where an ethnic insurgency has thrived for decades. But they also filmed
the journalists extensively during interviews with villagers. Every
night, the police faxed a multipage handwritten report to their
headquarters in the capital, Naypyidaw.
Asked why, the chief minder, police Maj. Zaw Min Oo, said: “We like
to keep a record of what you do, who you talk to, what you eat … you are
our guests.”
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