The Buddhist extremist movement in Myanmar, known as 969, portrays itself as a grassroots creed.
Its
chief proponent, a monk named Wirathu, was once jailed by the former
military junta for anti-Muslim violence and once called himself the "
Burmese bin Laden."
But a Reuters examination traces 969's
origins to an official in the dictatorship that once ran Myanmar, and
which is the direct predecessor of today's reformist government. The 969
movement now enjoys support from senior government officials,
establishment monks and even some members of the opposition National
League for Democracy (NLD), the political party of Nobel peace laureate
Aung San Suu Kyi.
"Wirathu's sermons are about promoting love and
understanding between religions," Sann Sint, minister of religious
affairs, told Reuters in his first interview with the international
media. "It is impossible he is inciting religious violence."
Sann
Sint, a former lieutenant general in Myanmar's army, also sees nothing
wrong with the boycott of Muslim businesses being led by the 969 monks.
"We are now practicing market economics," he said. "Nobody can stop
that. It is up to the consumers."
President Thein Sein is
signaling a benign view of 969, too. His office declined to comment for
this story. But in response to growing controversy over the movement, it
issued a statement Sunday, saying 969 "is just a symbol of peace" and
Wirathu is "a son of Lord Buddha."
Wirathu and other monks have been closely linked to the sectarian violence spreading across Myanmar,In home display
formerly known as Burma. Anti-Muslim unrest simmered under the junta
that ran the country for nearly half a century. But the worst fighting
has occurred since the quasi-civilian government took power in March
2011.
Two outbursts in Rakhine State last year killed at least
192 people and left 140,000 homeless, mostly stateless Rohingya Muslims.
A Reuters investigation found that organized attacks on Muslims last
October were led by Rakhine nationalists incited by Buddhist monks and
sometimes abetted by local security forces.
In March this year,
at least 44 people died and 13,000 were displaced — again, mostly
Muslims — during riots in Meikhtila, a city in central Myanmar. Reuters
documented in April that the killings happened after monks led Buddhist
mobs on a rampage. In May, Buddhists mobs burned and terrorized Muslim
neighborhoods in the northern city of Lashio. Reports of unrest have
since spread nationwide.
The numbers 969, innocuous in
themselves, refer to attributes of the Buddha, his teachings and the
monkhood. But 969 monks have been providing the moral justification for a
wave of anti-Muslim bloodshed that could scuttle Myanmar's nascent
reform program. Another prominent 969 monk, Wimala Biwuntha, likens
Muslims to a tiger who enters an ill-defended house to snatch away its
occupants.
Officially, Myanmar has no state religion, but its
rulers have long put Buddhism first. Muslims make up an estimated 4
percent of the populace. Buddhism is followed by 90 percent of the
country's 60 million people and is promoted by a special department
within the ministry of religion created during the junta.
In
Burma's nascent democracy, the monks have emerged as a political force
in the run-up to a general election scheduled for 2015. Their new
potency has given rise to a conspiracy theory here: The 969 movement is
controlled by disgruntled hardliners from the previous junta, who are
fomenting unrest to derail the reforms and foil an election landslide by
Suu Kyi's NLD.
No evidence has emerged to support this belief. But some in the government say there is possibly truth to it.
"Some
people are very eager to reform, some people don't want to reform," Soe
Thein, one of President Thein Sein's two closest advisors, told
Reuters. "So, regarding the sectarian violence, some people may be that
side — the anti-reform side."
Even if 969 isn't controlled by
powerful hardliners, it has broad support, both in high places and at
the grass roots, where it is a genuine and growing movement.
Officials
offer tacit backing, said Wimala, the 969 monk. "By letting us give
speeches to protect our religion and race, I assume they are supporting
us," he said.
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