(First published in Setopati as Thailand to Bangladesh: Worrisome trend for democracy in Asia)
If history is any guide the rival sides in the snowballing conflicts in Asia, both domestic and international, have much more to lose from the continuing friction and stalemate. While Sino-Japanese rivalry risks upsetting the relatively stable international order, the boiling conflicts in Bangladesh and Thailand risk undermining the democratic institutions in each with lasting implications in each case.
With the outbreak of grisly conflicts in the Central African
Republic and South Sudan, the year 2014 has been welcomed very bleakly in the
African continent. As such, given the deadly combination of the legacy of an
ugly and complicated colonial past and the present-day rush of every competing
side to get the bigger pie of the mineral wealth, Africa is finding it rather
difficult to dissociate itself from long running conflicts.
But having the overt wars in two nation states
simultaneously is far worse than having a lingering
presence of low-intensity conflicts in various parts. Keep this in the context of the continuing
chaos in Mali, Somalia and host of other African countries and a very ominous
picture of African continent emerges.
On comparison, Asia with some of the most prominent emerging
powers in the world, has had a different historical trajectory so far in terms of overt conflicts.
The major conflicts of the past decade and half in Afghanistan and Iraq, while definitely no less lethal in terms of death and destruction than the present day conflicts in Africa, were of a different nature for having been instigated by a foreign power. Troubling fact is that both in Afghanistan and Iraq today, the long running and currently deteriorating conflicts are increasingly being defined across the ethnic/sectarian faultlines.