Kerry Brown: Why won't the Chinese make Burma accept the aid?
Despite the post-cyclone suffering, the junta in Rangoon is turning down most aid from Western NGOs, and its most powerful neighbour has been complicit as the death toll mounts. But Beijing's concern for her own reputation may yet open the doors
Sunday, 11 May 2008
When around 100,000 of your people have been killed by a natural calamity, with an estimated doubling of that amount when the final numbers of fatalities are known, you would have thought that a government, of whatever political complexion, would react to offers of outside help with alacrity.
But the military junta in Burma has so far resisted accessing help from international donors and aid agents. Pressure has been applied through the UN and the EU, and the US has called accepting help at this time a "no brainer". But Burma's government has so far been uncooperative. Its 46-year-old policy of extreme isolationism continues unabated. So what about Burma's friends? China is the country which has most influence there. After all, it seems to have been the Chinese who discouraged the junta from adopting too hard a line when, last September, monks took to the streets of several Burmese cities to protest against the country's economic devastation.
Could they not apply similar pressure and encourage the junta allow in the aid? They could, discreetly, but do they want to? (And if they are already doing so, it has not been sufficient to make an impact.) Beijing has big interests in Burma, from where it gets the oil and gas its economy is hungry for. It invests there. The Chinese Prime Minister, the amiable Wen Jiabao, had reportedly told the Burmese earlier in the year that China did not want an unstable neighbour on its doorstep. Four nuclear powers (India, Pakistan, Russia and possibly North Korea) crowded round its borders was quite enough to worry about.
This desire for regional stability will be at the front of China's considerations as it responds to the impact of this crisis on Burma. It knows better than most what the regime is doing, but it uses this in ways that are very firmly tied to China's self-interest.
This is not to say that images of the suffering of people in other countries during a time like this do not elicit the same sympathy among the Chinese population as they do elsewhere. During the tsunami in 2004, for example, China gave aid to the affected countries, and offered humanitarian help and assistance, and yesterday it delivered 58 tonnes of its own aid to Burma. But charity and philanthropy operate differently in China. While China's reforms over the past 30 years have lifted many hundreds of millions of people out of poverty, it is still a poor country per capita, as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) pointed out, with an average GDP of $2,100 (£1,080) per head. Quite rationally, for many Chinese, charity begins at home. Thus aid offered anywhere has to have a specific purpose, one that serves national self-interest.
Chinese aid in Africa does just that. Talk of its being a giver of untied aid is simply wrong. China does not aid countries that recognise Taiwan (there are five in Africa); and on giving aid it implicitly expects "friendliness" from the recipient countries, through entities such as the UN or the IMF. African leaders such as the President of Senegal may say that Chinese aid is given more quickly, and more effectively than aid from the West. Indeed, the World Bank admits its assessment processes are horribly complex. But even if the real cost is written very faintly, there is a price tag. China's aid giving is highly strategic, and fits with an overall soft diplomacy policy to improve its international standing.
This relates to a crucial difference with Chinese aid. China operates as a giver of aid almost entirely as a state actor. It is the Chinese government that is giving aid, rather than Chinese NGOs or charities. The international aspect of the latter's work is very small: they operate almost solely domestically. There is no Chinese version of Oxfam. Money from China for relief and assistance is money from the Chinese government – and that means money sanctioned by the Communist Party.
So to the Chinese Communist Party Burma is a country of great strategic importance, rich in raw materials. The Party will see a country in which it has a unique level of useful influence. It will also see a country that is becoming strongly reliant on Chinese investment and support. The more hard-nosed in the Politburo and the upper reaches of the Chinese government, well-versed in the arts of realpolitik, will see a unique opportunity that might come from a monopoly of aid to Burma. For them, the regime's blocking of European and American assistance isn't wholly unwelcome.
Their mindset will be that such assistance, wherever it comes from (even an NGO, with no evident state links), should be regarded with suspicion and must the political sanction of the authorities in the originating country. They will believe that it must be motivated by underlying political strategies. In the case of Burma, this would be to continue the pressure on the Burmese government to reform, thereby increasing Western influence there. Abroad, China operates ina radically different way from how China behaves domestically. Of the world's top 10 economies, it is the only one that isn't a democracy.
Just like last September, though, there is a silver lining. Back then, the Burmese government seemed to listen for once. And the Chinese, as they have in North Korea, took a more proactive stance because, as never before, they care about their reputation. The UK's Department for International Development and China are currently working together on aid projects in some African countries. China is as keen to learn about more technically effective aid giving, as it is about making good economic investments abroad. Seeking partnership with China in this area, like so many others, might be more fruitful than it at first appears. China does not wish to be involved with issues that impact on its image – as it showed when it shifted its position last year in Darfur and started putting pressure on the the Sudanese government.
It also understands, as well as other governments, that the current Burmese regime is less and less sustainable. The Burmese government may well find that the price tag for aid from China this time is pretty similar to that for aid from the West – change, or we walk away.
Dr Kerry Brown is associate fellow on Chatham House's Asia programme
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Copyright 2008 Independent News and Media Limited

"a unique opportunity that might come from a monopoly of aid to Burma"
This isn't possible, considering that Burma has already accepted aid from India, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia.
Which brings to light another issue. Why is the "West" not handing over aid to any of the above countries, or even (gasp!) China for them to bring into the country? I find it astonishing that some are even contemplating air-dropping aid as a last resort. How is that better than giving the aid to the Chinese so that it can be handed out in an orderly manner?
Methinks the Americans would rather die than allow the Chinese to be deemed the saviour of Burma instead of themselves.
@keir
Are you having a laugh? From first hand experience, I can tell you that SARS was covered extensively in the media in the Southern Regions and Hong Kong.
Are you sure that old man didnt say "If only I could read..." ?
Posted by Pete | 12.05.08, 11:01 GMT
It is always about China. Thailand is Burma's largest investor and trading partner. Why not pressure them? Or why not India. Actually why not pressure all three. China's role in Burma is not like in North Korea, they don't hold all or even the majority of the cards. They have much less influence in Burma then in Sudan.
Posted by William | 12.05.08, 03:53 GMT
Burmese people could have been free from junta now if Russia and China did not backup. they are the rival of western countries so their tactic is to keep Burma on their side. It is no wonder such the authoritarian country like Russia and China try to keep the junta as their men and they exploit the natural resources in Burma and selling the arms for their own profit. They are not regarded as expertise traders rather they are regarded as brutal traders like robbery. They only dare domineering to such a poor country like Burma .
My strong recommendation is that the world should save the people of Burma without caring the Russia and China s voice. Dont include them in the meeting. These two countries themselves are dictatorships. They want this inhuman actions keep going. As we can in the past they never work on humanitarian assistance, they never help the Burmese people, they just take advantage for themselves, robe the natural resources from the poor people.
Western world can go in, US can go in, there are a lot advantages in return, besides saving the life of these poor people. Once Burma becomes Democracy, it will adopt the western civilian cultural and western ideology. Burma will become a base for western country like Thailand now. There are also natural resources still available in Burma like gas, oil, stone, wood and others, it just requires the expert to find out those resources. Finally the world will never see this kind of inhuman action again and again on news, TV and pictures once the junta is overthrown.
Posted by Sai | 12.05.08, 03:38 GMT
@ James: "Is there any country in the world that has not been made worse, gone backwards under communism or socialism?"
Well, firstly, the Burmese Junta specifically installed themselves to prevent communiss from taking power in Burma. They did this very ruthlesly as well. That's facism, its where a bunch of morons try to keep out the communists through authoritarian rule, and they can slash wages like the liberal states cant manage, to make things better for big business. Read Daniel Guerin, Facism and Big Business.
Two, true communism has never existed.
Three, even if you call the USSR communist, Russia did not get worse or go backwards under it. The purges, repression etc. were awful, but that was happening under the Tsarist regime as well. Bear in mind people were dying of starvation en masse when Lenin took power. Russia went through what the bourgoisee normally define as progress. And there are other examples, Russia is just one. Freedom doesn't mean so much if Ur starving.
Posted by Left888 | 11.05.08, 21:47 GMT
American regards the humanitarian catastrophe as an opportunity to overturn the current Burmese regime not to help Burmese .so you have no right to blem china
Posted by fighting | 11.05.08, 16:26 GMT
Don't you feel tired of such stupid kind of stereotypes? seems as if the Chinese are capable of everything and whoever have trouble, no matter in Sudan in Africa, or in Asia, it is the whole responsibility of them while you can enjoy a cup of tea and write something you like. Why not invite the Americans to start a war there and teach these "uncivilized" "digusting" countries a lesson since we are always good at it?
Posted by Tommy | 11.05.08, 15:22 GMT
Myanmar does not have any problem with aid from India, where I live. The problem with all you in the West is you do not respect sovereignity; always pontificating without even an "ouch" to your killing and pillage in Iraq. No wonder your concerns don't carry any weight.
Posted by Roger | 11.05.08, 09:15 GMT
Let's not ask why China won't MAKE Burma accept aid (we know they are unlikely to do so and if it was a case of MAKING them accept it we could do it ourselves) let's ask instead why we aren't channelling the aid through China, a country Burma's junta trusts. That seems to me the best way forward in the absence of an invasion.
Posted by Judy Keyse | 11.05.08, 08:50 GMT
Is there any country in the world that has not been made worse, gone backwards under communism or socialism?
I read in another article in another paper that they have just received 600 trucks from China and dont want to get them dirty.
Why is it that ever one party state and war zone on this plant the Chinese are involved with the wrong side? Sudan, Iran etc etc, where tens of thousands die.
Typically the British socialist government response these days is to say the Americans should not drop food from the air not to upset anyone.
Posted by james | 11.05.08, 08:42 GMT
Living in Beijing, I remember the comment of a man whose wife died of SARS: "If only we knew English, we could have found out what our government was hiding before it was too late." SARS, bird 'flu, that toxic spill heading towards the massive city of Harbin... The Chinese regime is interested in only one thing: staying in power. If its people have to suffer and die, so be it. The state above the people. hence it is only natural for the Chinese to support such horrible regimes such as those in North Korea and Burma.
www.lairdkeir.spaces.live.com
Posted by Keir | 11.05.08, 05:51 GMT