| The ethnic origins of modern Myanmar (known historically as Burma) are a
mixture of Indo-Aryans, who began pushing into the area around 700 B.C., and
the Mongolian invaders under Kublai Khan who penetrated the region in the
13th century. Anawrahta (1044–1077) was the first great unifier of Myanmar.
In 1612, the British East India Company sent agents to Burma, but the
Burmese doggedly resisted efforts of British, Dutch, and Portuguese traders
to establish posts along the Bay of Bengal. Through the Anglo-Burmese War in
1824–1826 and two subsequent wars, the British East India Company expanded
to the whole of Burma. By 1886, Myanmar was annexed to India, then became a
separate colony in 1937.
During World War II, Burma was a key battleground; the 800-mile Burma
Road was the Allies' vital supply line to China. The Japanese invaded the
country in Dec. 1941, and by May 1942 had occupied most of it, cutting off
the Burma Road. After one of the most difficult campaigns of the war, Allied
forces liberated most of Burma prior to the Japanese surrender in Aug. 1945.
Burma became independent on Jan. 4, 1948. In 1962, left-wing general Ne
Win staged a coup, banned political opposition, suspended the constitution,
and introduced the “Burmese way of socialism.” After 25 years of economic
hardship and repression, the Burmese people held massive demonstrations in
1987 and 1988. These were brutally quashed by the State Law and Order
Council (SLORC). In 1989, the military government officially changed the
name of the country to Myanmar. (The U.S. State Department does not
recognize the name Myanmar or the military regime that represents it.)
In May 1990 elections, the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD)
won in a landslide. But the military, or SLORC, refused to recognize the
election results. The leader of the opposition, Aung San Suu Kyi, was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991, which focused world attention on
SLORC's repressive policies. Daughter of the assassinated general Aung San,
who was revered as the father of Burmese independence, Suu Kyi remained
under house arrest from 1989 until 1995. A new constitution was drafted in
1994 that called for an elected executive branch but appeared designed
specifically to forbid Suu Kyi from becoming president. Suu Kyi continued to
protest against the government, but almost every move she made was answered
with a counterblow from SLORC.
Although the ruling junta has maintained a tight grip on Myanmar since
1988, it has not been able to subdue an insurgency in the country's south
that has gone on for decades. The ethnic Karen movement has sought an
independent homeland along Myanmar's southern border with Thailand. In Jan.
2004, the military government and the insurgents from the Karen National
Union agreed to end the fighting, but they stopped short of signing a
cease-fire.
The economy has been in a state of collapse except for the
junta-controlled heroin trade, the universities have remained closed, and
the AIDS epidemic, unrecognized by the junta, has gripped the country.
From 2000 to 2002, Suu Kyi was again placed under house arrest. In spring
2003, the government cracked down once again on the democracy movement,
detaining Suu Kyi and shuttering NLD headquarters. The regime opened a
constitutional convention in May 2004, but many observers doubted its
legitimacy.
In October 2004, the government arrested Prime Minister Gen. Khin Nyunt
and charged him with corruption. He had angered the leadership of the junta
with his recent experiments with reform, first by freeing Suu Kyi from house
arrest and later for proposing a seven-step “road map to democracy.”
A series of coordinated bomb attacks in May 2005 killed about a dozen
people and wounded more than 100 in Rangoon. The military junta blamed the
Karen National Union and the Shan State Army. The ethnic rebel groups,
however, denied any involvement.
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