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Here’s what you need to know about democracy this week:

Democracy Stress Tested

1. Coup in Myanmar as the Military Arrests Aung San Suu Kyi

2. Navalny Sentenced as Russia Cracks Down on Protests

Democracy at Work

1. American Parks Can Help Promote Democracy

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Democracy Stress Tested

Demonstrators protest against Myanmar’s military coup outside Myanmar’s embassy in Bangkok, Thailand.
Credit: Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters.

Coup in Myanmar as the Military Arrests Aung San Suu Kyi

On Mon., Feb. 1, millions of people in the Southeast Asian country Myanmar (formerly known as Burma) awoke
to the news that the country’s military, the Tatmadaw, had overthrown the nation’s elected government in a coup
d’etat
. Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi, as well as other civilian officials, opposition
politicians, writers, and activists were reportedly
taken at gunpoint and detained. And on Tuesday, Suu Kyi was spuriously charged
with violations of import and export laws, and faces up to three years in prison. It is likely that the coup will
unravel the nation’s precarious democracy and plunge Myanmar back into military dictatorship.

Credit: Encyclopedia Britannica.

The coup was precipitated by the results
of November’s elections, in which the military’s political party won a mere 33 of 476 available seats, while Suu
Kyi’s party won 396. In the days before the coup, the military made
frivolous, unsubstantiated allegations of widespread fraud, pledging to “take action” and refusing to rule out a
coup.

The Tatmadaw has consolidated its control by seizing
the country’s infrastructure, suspending TV broadcasts, shuttering phone and Internet access in many major cities,
closing banks, and cancelling flights.

Despite the coup, the streets remained
largely peaceful; one observer described
them as eerily calm. However, others reported
seeing lines form at ATMs, the bright red flags of Suu Kyi’s party disappearing from homes and businesses, and
caravans of rowdy Tatmadaw supporters parading in trucks and blasting patriotic music.’

1. What is the history of democracy in Myanmar?

Ever since the nation gained independence from Britain in 1948, the Tatmadaw have stifled the democratic
aspirations of the people of Myanmar. Twice
before
, democratic movements have been crushed by military coups: first in 1962 when General Ne Win overthrew
the elected
civilian government, and then again in 1990 after a military junta reneged on a promise to honor the results of free
and fair elections. Aung
San Suu Kyi
(Myanmar’s current elected leader) was the key figure of this latter democratic movement and won a
Nobel Peace Prize for her nonviolent resistance.

And even since 2008, when mass protests led to reforms, the Tatmadaw have retained strong control over
Myanmar’s pseudo-democracy. Under the 2008
constitution
, the military appoints one-fourth of Parliament and maintains authority over key government
agencies.

It is true that in 2015, the Tatmadaw accepted
the results of a contested election swept by Suu Kyi’s party, making observers optimistic about the prospects for
true multi-party elections. But Azeem
Ibrahim
, director of the Center for Global Policy think tank, cautioned that the progress was largely
illusory: “Even though Myanmar always had the veneer of democracy, it was never a new democracy in any sense… The
military still held all the cards. They had, essentially, power without any accountability whatsoever.”

2. How does this all relate to the ongoing genocide in Myanmar?

Though it’s impossible to know the counterfactual of whether there would still be a genocide
in Myanmar if it were a democracy, dictatorships undoubtedly have a freer hand to commit horrible acts. And while we
don’t know whether Suu Kyi acceeded to the genocide out of a desire to placate the military or whether she genuinely
supported it, what’s happening to the Rohingya is an important part of any discussion involving Myanmar.

Rohingya Muslims are an ethnic minority in Buddhist majority-Myanmar who have been persecuted since the
1970s. In
2017
, the military used attacks committed by an extremist Rohingya group as an excuse to launch a campaign of
mass killing, rape, and arson. 730,000
Rohingyas have been displaced and tens
of thousands
have been killed, abuses which Suu Kyi defended
before the International Court of Justice. The hundreds of thousands still in Myanmar remain
disenfranchised and detained in squalid camps.

Suu Kyi, once globally admired, has undergone
a precipitous fall from grace for her role supporting these atrocities. Nevertheless, her support for the military’s
genocide has not protected her political position. After a fledgling democratic moment, Suu Kyi is once again under
military imprisonment.

Even if the U.S.’ strategic interest in Myanmar remains limited, these often-ignored stories must be
discussed. From 1987 to 2007, major Western news corporations devoted
50 times more coverage to Israeli-Palestininian skirmishes in which 7,000 died than the conflict in the Congo in
which five million died. Stories matter even when America has less of a direct stake in them. We can no longer
ignore the plight of the Rohingya, whether they are oppressed by dictators or democrats.

Credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko/The Associated Press

Navalny Sentenced as Russia Cracks Down on Protests

Massive protests against the arrest and imprisonment of opposition leader Alexei Navalny once again
rocked Russia over the weekend, as it became increasingly clear that the Kremlin would do anything in its power to
quell the growing opposition movement it sees as an existential threat to Putin’s regime. Tens of thousands took to
the streets on Sunday, overcoming a huge law enforcement presence and police brutality. And on Tuesday, after
Russian authorities sentenced Navalny, the Russian people once again returned
to the streets
in solidarity with the detained pro-democracy leader.

In response, the state implemented unprecedented
measures
to discourage protests. In Moscow, businesses were ordered closed, subway stations near the capital
shut down, and pedestrian and vehicular traffic was heavily restricted. Hundreds of videos show officers dragging
and beating
a large number of peaceful demonstrators
with tasers and clubs, leaving many bloody and badly injured.

In total, the authorities detained over 7,100 people
during this week’s protests, mostly at random—the highest number of arrests recorded by monitoring groups in at
least a decade, and around 3,000 more than last week. According to Amnesty
International
, so many citizens were arrested on Sunday that the state ran out of jail cells to hold them all.

Among those detained were at
least 93 journalists
, some specifically targeted for their posts on social media. By Tuesday, Leonid Volkov,
the acting head of Navalny’s political organization, reported
that half of his staff—about ninety people—were under arrest.

1. What happened at Navalny’s hearing on Tuesday?

Vehicles with diplomatic plates lined
the street
as the trial began, reflecting international attention and outrage.

Navalny, appearing in good health and spirits, delivered an impassioned speech to the court criticizing
the actions of Putin and his regime. “The main reason this is happening,” Navalny said, “is to scare a huge number
of people. One person is jailed to scare millions.”

As widely expected, the judge ruled that Navalny did violate his parole (by failing to report while in a
coma in Germany) and sentenced him to serve 2.5 years in a prison colony—the remainder of his original 3.5 years
prison sentence.

Thousands quickly mobilized to protest the ruling. Crowds marched through the capital, chanting
“Russia without Putin!” Hundreds of riot police blockaded Moscow’s Manezhnaya Square, detaining over 1,000
people in Moscow alone.

This most recent injustice has only further enraged the Russian people. As Navalny said
at his hearing, “Hundreds of thousands cannot be locked up… When they recognize this — and that moment will come —
all of this will fall apart, because you cannot lock up the whole country.”

2. What has the United States done so far—and what remains to be done?

  • One day after Navalny’s arrest, the U.S announced sanctions
    on a Russian ship involved in constructing the controversial Nord Stream 2, an important undersea pipeline
    running from Russia to Europe.

  • Key members of the Biden Administration have publicly condemned Navalny’s jailing
    and the persecution of his supporters, including Secretary of State Antony
    Blinken
    and National Security Advisor Jake
    Sullivan
    .

  • In Biden’s first call
    to Putin last week, the U.S president reportedly called for Navalny’s “immediate release.”

This isn’t enough. The US should immediately implement direct sanctions on those involved in Navalny’s
persecution.

We can do so by applying the Magnitsky act to all 35
individuals
identified by Navalny’s team as aiding and abetting his poisoning and detainment. This will allow
us to freeze the assets of those responsible and impose travel bans on them and their families.

Though not as broad, Senator
Mitt Romney’s bill
authorizing sanctions on Russian officials involved in Navalny’s poisoning would also be a
good starting point.

A rapid and decisive economic and diplomatic response is vital. We must stand by the Russian people in
their growing calls for freedom, showing Putin he cannot sustain his power through force alone.

Democracy at Work

Credit: PlanetWare

American Parks Can Help Promote Democracy

In a previous newsletter,
we discussed parks as a partial solution to the epidemic of loneliness during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some cities are
taking steps (like building
fire pits
) to boost the quality and comfort of outdoor spaces, particularly during the cold, winter months.

But there’s a separate, albeit related, reason to build parks. In addition to combating loneliness, parks
can also play a role in boosting American democracy, argues Matthew
Clarke
, Executive Director for the non-profit Design
Trust for Public Space
.

According to Clarke, in an America “fractured along race, class, density, and creed,” parks provide a
common space that can promote the country’s sense of community, civic engagement, and overall health. Importantly,
parks can help remove us from our social media bubbles where we rarely interact with people of different
backgrounds.

Research supports the idea that parks assist democracy. A 2014
study
using survey data from Portland, Oregon found that participation in park programs may have a “snowball
effect,” driving citizens to volunteer in other ways and become more civically engaged. A 2016
study
of public parks in New Orleans found that they strengthened social connections between people from
different groups, and that racial minorities and the elderly felt particularly empowered during visits.

What are other possible related solutions?

Parks don’t have to be in person to be effective at boosting civic engagement. To combat the divisive
nature of social media, some are proposing digital parks or libraries that could oppose the echo chambers often
found on Facebook, Twitter and Youtube. Dubbed “digital public infrastructure” by scholar Ethan Zuckerman, the idea
is that an online space could bring people together instead of creating the social divisions that permeate
traditional social media platforms.

Massachusetts gubernatorial candidate Danielle Allen and activist Eli Pariser argue
that in order to be successful, unlike most social media platforms of today, digital parks should prioritize
community-building rather profit-maximization. One long-term example of a successful digital forum is Vermont’s
‘Front Porch Forum
,’ a moderated email chain that two-thirds of Vermonters use to engage in community
discussions.

In a country plagued by the pandemics of loneliness, polarization, and disinformation (as well as
illness, of course), it is now more vital than ever to build communities both online and offline: parks are one step
in that process.

 

 

 

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