The Economist - UK (2022-04-16)

(Antfer) #1

34 Asia  The Economist April 16th 2022


refugees  as  unwanted  guests.Itdoesnot
allow them to resettle in Thailand.It hoped
that they would eventuallygohome.That
did begin to happen in 2011whenMyanmar
began its decade­long experimentwithhy­
brid  democracy.  By  2015newarrivals,at
any rate, had dried up. 
The coup changed everything.Sincethe
army  seized  power  last  year,violencehas
engulfed  much  of  Myanmarasthejunta
tries to stamp out persistentopposition.In
December  the  Tatmadaw conducted air
strikes and ramped up itsattacksinKaren
and Kayah states, along theborder.Nearly
10,000  Burmese  fled  to  Thailand,accord­
ing to the un’s refugee agency.Thatnum­
ber  shrank  to  about  2,000whenfighting
abated, and grew again tomorethantwice
as many when it resumed inmid­March.
It  is  the  unofficial  policyoftheThai
government to return Burmeserefugeesto
Myanmar once the war subsides,according
to an aid worker based inBangkok.Some­
times they send them backevenasthevio­
lence  continues.  On  March 25th, when
1,500 Burmese sought refugealongtheriv­
er,  the  army  sent  them  back,saysPhoe
Thingyan,  the  secretary of a volunteer
group  that  works  with  refugees.This,he
says, is “very common”. Iftrue,itwouldbe
a  violation  of  internationallawsprevent­
ing the repatriation of refugeestoa coun­
try where they would face harm.
Tanee  Sangrat,  a  spokesmanforThai­
land’s  Ministry  of  ForeignAffairs,denies
the  charge.  “It  is  our  long­standingpolicy
not to push them back,” hesays.According
to  Somchai  Kijcharoenrungroj,thegover­
nor  of  the  border  provinceofTak,“when
they  cross  to  our  side,  wetake careof
them”,  providing  them  with temporary
shelter,  food,  clothing  andmedicaltreat­
ment.  Some  refugees,  he says, actually
want  to  return,  because  theyworryabout
the  security  of  their  homesandfarms.In
those  cases,  the  Thai  governmenttrans­
ports  them  across  the  river. “We never
chase them away.” 
Thailand is in a tough spot.Thefriend­
ship  between  local  ThaisandKarens is
deep,  says  a  Karen  communityleaderin
Mae Sot, a Thai border city.Butthecentral
government is reluctant toimprovecondi­
tions for refugees for fear itwillencourage
more  to  come.  And  the  Thaigovernment,
itself  dominated  by  its  army,“does not
want to compromise its relationshipwith
the Burmese military”, saysMinZinofthe
Institute for Strategy and Policy,a Burmese
think­tank. Thousands of refugeescamped
on  the  river  would  look  likea humanitar­
ian  crisis,  not  only  embarrassingtheTat­
madaw  but  also  stiffeningtheresolveof
Myanmar’s  rebel  groups.  Thatwouldbea
recipe  for  more  violence,andmorerefu­
gees.  Easier,  then,  to  pushthelikesofMs
Htun May across the river,wheretheycan
remain Myanmar’s problem.n

ArchitectureinJapan

Metabolism, digested


T


he nakagin capsule tower stands
out from its unremarkable neighbours
in  Tokyo’s  Shimbashi  district.  Made  up  of
144  identical  cuboids,  stacked  upon  and
jutting  out  from  each  other,  the  modular
tower  is  both  unabashedly  futurist  and
subtly respectful of tradition. Each cuboid
has a round window that evokes both space
travel and the ancient architecture of Kyo­
to.  They  contain  built­in  living  spaces
composed  of  bath  units,  beds,  desks  and
household  electronics.  Kurokawa  Kisho,
the  building’s  architect,  envisioned  his
cramped  “capsules”  as  dwellings  for  what
he  called  Homo movens,  or  highly  mobile
modern humans, such as the businessmen
who  lived  in  distant  suburbs  and  worked
late in Tokyo offices.
When the tower first went up in 1972, it
became  a  prime  example  of  Metabolism,
an  influential  architectural  movement  in
post­war  Japan.  Metabolism’s  chief  expo­
nents  had  studied  under  Tange  Kenzo,  an
architect  whose  works  included  the  park
and memorial built in Hiroshima to com­
memorate  the  nuclear  attack  of  1945.  The
Metabolists  designed  buildings  to  be
adaptable and replaceable, and resilient to
threats such as wars and earthquakes. But
not,  alas,  to  neglect.  On  April  12th  work

started on demolishing the tower, follow­
ing  a  long  but  ultimately  futile  battle  to
preserve it. 
Given that, it is ironic that Metabolists
sought to shift thinking about architecture
from the mechanical to the biological, con­
ceiving  of  cities  as  organisms  that  grew
and changed rather than as static construc­
tions  to  be  planned  and  maintained.  “We
regard  human  society  as  a  vital  process,  a
continuous  development  from  atom  to
nebula,”  they  declared  in  their  first  mani­
festo,  written  ahead  of  the  World  Design
Conference in Tokyo in 1960. 
Their  ideas  were  informed  both  by
Western modernism and Eastern philoso­
phy,  drawing  particular  inspiration  from
Japan’s Ise shrine, which has been entirely
reconstructed almost every 20 years since
the  7th  century.  Metabolism  also  embod­
ied the energy of Japan’s rapid­growth era.
The Metabolists did more than just design
buildings: in their hands, architecture be­
came  a  field  for  reimagining  Japanese
identity after the ravages of the war. 
In  their  texts,  the  architects  pondered
the  relationship  between  technology  and
humanity.  They  considered  the  demands
of  designing  cities  for  a  growing  urban
population  and  a  humming  economy.

TOKYO
An ode to a landmark tower, and to a more optimistic time

Chipping off the old block 
Free download pdf