Myanmar: The Way Forward
It is three years since Myanmar’s democratically elected government was overthrown in a coup and the country’s legitimate leaders, President Win Myint and State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, were jailed.
The military (Tatmadaw) has since struggled to assert control over the country in the face of fierce fighting with a diverse array of armed pro-democracy and ethnic resistance groups.
While evidence from the front lines points to a steady erosion of the military’s strength, human rights groups say the civilian population continues to experience systematic abuses, including arbitrary arrests, torture, and extrajudicial killings that “amount to crimes against humanity and war crimes”.
As Myanmar confronts a growing humanitarian tragedy, the international community, including Myanmar’s ASEAN neighbours, have shown little ability or willingness to rein in the behaviour of the junta or its leader Min Aung Hlaing.
Join two people who have first-hand experience of conditions in Myanmar to review the situation in the country today; what other countries, including Australia, should be doing; and how this increasingly bloody conflict might play out.
Professor Sean Turnell, Australian academic and economic policy adviser to Aung San Suu Kyi, was held in Insein Prison for 650 days on confected charges of breaching Myanmar’s Official Secrets Act. He was released in November 2022. His latest book An Unlikely Prisoner was published last November.
Thinzar Shunlei Yi is a Myanmar pro-democracy activist with the civil society coalition Action Committee for Democracy Development. Winner of Outstanding Young Human Rights Activist in the 2022 Magnitsky Human Rights Awards, she was forced to flee to Thailand after the junta issued an arrest warrant for her. She continues to advocate for the restoration of democracy in Myanmar through campaigns such as Sisters2Sisters, promoting solidarity among Myanmar women, and People's Goal, which encourages Myanmar soldiers to defect from the military junta.