/ 10 November 2006

Burma: glittering junta wedding sparks outrage

Strings of diamonds, cascades of champagne and tens of millions of dollars worth of gifts would be con-sidered ostentatious at any wedding.

But in Burma, one of the poorest countries in Asia, the luxury on display in a video of the wedding laid on by the head of the junta, General Than Shwe, for his daughter, has left people up in arms. Recently posted on the internet, the leaked 10-minute clip has provided ammunition for opponents of the military regime, who say that spending on the couple’s marriage in July was more than three times the state health budget.

In the most opulent sequence the camera zooms in on glittering jewelled clusters in the hair of the bride, Thandar Shwe, then pans down from her diamond ear-studs to at least six thick strings of what appear to be diamonds.

At a lavish reception the groom, Major Zw Phyo Win, an army officer and deputy director at the ministry of commerce, pours champagne over a cascade of glasses and helps his bride slice into a five-tiered cake.

What is not seen are the gifts, which reportedly include luxury cars and houses worth a total of $50-million. According to south-east Asian news- papers the rush to buy jewels as presents and decorations pushed up the price of precious stones in the run-up to the wedding. The video appears to have been filmed with the approval of the married couple and guests. It is unclear how it was leaked or how widely it can be seen in Burma.

“Such mindless indulgence — smiling, well-fed guests wrapped in their finest clothing and most expensive jewels — is an affront to the millions of Burmese suffering under the incompetence and brutality of the country’s military leadership, and the millions of Burmese migrants trying to scratch out a living on foreign soil because no proper employment is available at home,” wrote editor Aung Zaw in Irrawaddy, a Thailand-based magazine popular among Burmese exiles.

“Than Shwe was the one who accused other top leaders of corruption whenever he wanted to remove them. It’s the pot calling the kettle black.”

The minutiae of the wedding arrangements provided material for observers of the secretive regime who believe Than Shwe may be preparing to step back from the day-to-day running of the country. “In the seating arrangement Than Shwe and his deputy were on one table and all the other junta members were on a very distant table. That tells you a lot about the hierarchy,” Soe Aung of the Bangkok-based National Council for the Union of Burma was quoted as saying by Reuters.

In footage of the ceremony, Than Shwe walks beside his daughter in white shirt and a traditional orange wrap called a longgyi, a rare sight of a general almost always seen in military uniform. Many guests were in uniform. — Â