Friday, 25 April 2014

Epiphanies from Win Tin


When pro-democracy activist Win Tin was admitted
to a Yangon hospital in early March, he almost certainly was wearing a blue,
short-sleeved, button-down shirt. The garment was part of his uniform during
his nearly 20 years as a political prisoner in Myanmar, a sentence he served for
speaking out against the military regime that ruled the country for roughly
five decades. When he was finally released in 2008, Win Tin refused to discard
his prison uniform, pledging to wear a similar blue shirt until Myanmar's
remaining political prisoners were discharged. (Though hundreds have been
released since the country began experimenting with democratic reforms, dozens
still remain behind bars.) He died on April 23, at the age of 84 or 85.



Win Tin was one of
Myanmar's most prominent and outspoken political dissidents. A journalist by profession, Win Tin was already in his late 50s when
he became one of the founders of the opposition National League for Democracy
(NLD) in 1988, alongside Aung San Suu Kyi. He was imprisoned in early 1989
after the 8888 uprising, a series of popular protests against the military
government. Caged and tortured for most of the next two decades, Win Tin's
health deteriorated: he lost a testicle due to an unsanitary prison operation
and suffered two heart attacks. Still, he wrote when he could, even grinding up
bricks with water to make ink to write
poetry and political reflections on his cell wall. In 1996, the government
added an additional seven years to his sentence after he smuggled
a letter to the United Nations about the horrific conditions in Myanmar's
detention facilities.



The country's longest-serving
political prisoner, Win Tin was unexpectedly released in 2008, two years before
Burma's 2010 national elections began the country's tenuous move from military
governance to democratic rule. After his amnesty, Win Tin helped other formerly
detained dissidents reintegrate into Burmese society and began working to
transform NLD from an opposition movement to a functioning political party.



In February 2013, I spoke to Win Tin at the
home of a supporter in Yangon; this interview has been edited and condensed for
clarity.



In July 1989, our party was almost gone because the whole leadership had gone to
prison. During that time the NLD won
the 1990 general election in a landslide. Yet the government removed all the
parliamentary members who won. The generals made them flee the country, go to
prison, or resign.



The regime sent so many political prisoners to jail, thousands of people, including myself. I
spent 20 years in jail and they have never said they're sorry. Not to me, nor
to my friends or to my family.



For 20 years, the people still supported Aung San Suu
Kyi and the party
. Our
party was still intact, so the government finally agreed to have us register as
a political party in January 2012. So we participated in the 2012 elections,
and we won. 



There is a conflict between the Burmese government and
the armed ethnic groups
.
For more than 50 years, there has been civil war. There is not a single day
without gunshots. 



You cannot command reconciliation. Both sides have to make amends for the bad
doings of the past. People think that the past is the past-- that you have to
forgive or forget it -- but it cannot just come from the party. You need the
people's consent.



Military leaders should atone for their past deeds. We don't want to make them feel ashamed,
but they act like they've done nothing at all. That's the problem.



The ruling party cannot cheat like they did before
because of international attention on Burma now.
The whole world is looking at them. They could not do
the same things in 2012 as they did [to manipulate] the 2010 elections.



We sent some young men to stand election in 2012. We didn't think they would win, but we
said, "Go to get some experience, and that's all." But they won. Why? Because
people supported them -- not only NLD members, but also new supporters. It's
inevitable that the ruling party will lose in 2015. And I think we will win.


Ruben Salgado/Getty Images




http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/epiphanies-from-win-tin/

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