Insight Myanmar

Enemy of the State


Listen Later

Episode #488: Veteran journalist and human rights advocate Chris Gunness describes Myanmar as “an extraordinarily fascinating country,” one that shaped both his early reporting career and his later work on international justice. Following events from London in the mid-1980s, he saw a nation marked by colonial legacies, ethnic fragmentation and civil war, yet so closed that major crises went unnoticed abroad. By 1986, Myanmar had become the center of his reporting as he tracked growing instability. In spite of his inexperience, he was sent undercover by the BBC to report from the country in the buildup to the 1988 uprising.

Ordered to report openly, he filed news dispatches from a dilapidated Rangoon hotel. A day later, a hidden message from student leaders—coordinated by a prominent human rights lawyer—summoned him to a secret meeting. Blindfolded and taken to a safe house, he recorded interviews with organizers, a banker and a soldier. These tapes, smuggled out through diplomatic channels, were broadcast by the BBC on 6 August 1988. One interview inadvertently announced the precise moment protests would begin. At 8:08 a.m. on 8 August, millions marched across the country. The entire Burmese populace was informed ahead of time as a direct result of this reporting.

Deported to Dhaka as a result, Gunness continued reporting, producing dispatches that became Myanmar’s primary source of national information during the uprising. Though he rejects credit for sparking the movement—calling the Burmese people “the real heroes”—the experience taught him how shared information empowers political action.

Gunness later founded the Myanmar Accountability Project (MAP), using universal jurisdiction to pursue legal cases against junta leaders in Turkey, the Philippines, Indonesia and Timor-Leste. He also challenges junta attempts to gain legitimacy abroad, including a current case in the UK. Despite deep skepticism toward international justice and the UN’s failures in Myanmar, Gunness believes accountability efforts can preserve evidence, empower victims and reinforce the illegitimacy of military rule. Ultimately, however, he argues that Myanmar’s hope rests with its people, whose resilience he describes as “the indomitability of the Burmese spirit.”

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Insight MyanmarBy Insight Myanmar Podcast

  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7

4.7

51 ratings


More shows like Insight Myanmar

View all
The New Yorker Radio Hour by WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

The New Yorker Radio Hour

6,964 Listeners

The NPR Politics Podcast by NPR

The NPR Politics Podcast

25,950 Listeners

Fareed Zakaria GPS by CNN Podcasts

Fareed Zakaria GPS

3,477 Listeners

Newshour by BBC World Service

Newshour

1,060 Listeners

The Wisdom Podcast by The Wisdom Podcast

The Wisdom Podcast

325 Listeners

Insight Hour with Joseph Goldstein by Be Here Now Network

Insight Hour with Joseph Goldstein

961 Listeners

Meet the Press by NBC News

Meet the Press

4,049 Listeners

The Paris Review by The Paris Review

The Paris Review

801 Listeners

Post Reports by The Washington Post

Post Reports

5,379 Listeners

The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

The Ezra Klein Show

16,482 Listeners

State of the World from NPR by NPR

State of the World from NPR

438 Listeners

Letters from an American by Heather Cox Richardson

Letters from an American

6,258 Listeners

Ajahn Brahm Podcast by Everyday Dhamma Network

Ajahn Brahm Podcast

60 Listeners

DVB English News by Democratic Voice of Burma

DVB English News

0 Listeners

Myanmar Revolutionary Tales (တော်လှန်ခြင်းများနှင့်ခေတ်သစ်မြန်မာပြည်) by Insight Myanmar

Myanmar Revolutionary Tales (တော်လှန်ခြင်းများနှင့်ခေတ်သစ်မြန်မာပြည်)

3 Listeners

What's Happening in Myanmar by Frontier Myanmar

What's Happening in Myanmar

2 Listeners