Myanmar president meets UN chief

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/myanmar-president-meets-un-chief.html [/postlink] Monday 30th April, 2012

Myanmar president U Thein Sein held talks with UN chief Ban Ki-moon in Myanmar's capital Naypyidaw Monday, a day after his arrival in Yangon.

Ban also met with speakers of the two houses of parliament Thura U Shwe Mann and U Khin Aung Myint, reported Xinhua.

No details were immediately available about the meetings.

Ban will address parliament later Monday, becoming the first international dignitary to make speech in Myanmar's legislature.

Ban is also scheduled to travel back to Yangon Tuesday and meet Aung San Suu Kyi, leader of the National League for Democracy (NLD).

At the invitation of U Thein Sein, Ban arrived in Yangon Sunday for a three-day official visit to Myanmar in the wake of significant changes taking place in the country.

It is Ban's third trip to Myanmar, the first being in 2008 after cyclone Nargis struck the country and the second in 2009.

Suu Kyi’s NLD to Join Parliament on Wednesday

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/suu-kyis-nld-to-join-parliament-on.html [/postlink]

8:38AM BST 30 Apr 2012

Burma’s main opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) has ended the dispute over the parliamentary admission oath and agrees to take its seats in the national legislature, party chairwomen Aung San Suu Kyi told a press conference at her Rangoon home on Monday morning.
Suu Kyi said NLD members decided to join Parliament on Wednesday in response to their supporters and MPs from ethnic groups who were keen to see the party take up the 43 seats they won in the landmark April 1 by-elections.
“There are two reasons why we decided to join Parliament,” said the 66-year-old. “One is we deeply respect the people’s desire who helped us win a majority at the election. These people want to see us in Parliament.
“Another reason is to show respect to members of ethnic political parties that are already MPs and who have asked us to join Parliament.”
MPs from ethnic political parties as well as independents and members of the National Unity Party all wrote letters in which they offered to cooperate with the NLD to change the Constitution within Parliament, according to Suu Kyi.
“Our party quickly made the decision to join Parliament because we have many matters with which to work together with these ethnic political parties,” said the Nobel Laureate.
She added that there are many undemocratic articles to change within the widely-condemned 2008 Constitution. “This is just a problem regarding the Constitution and is not a political conflict,” said Suu Kyi. “We do not create any political conflicts. Therefore, we agreed to join Parliament because we do not want to have any political tension.”
The NLD wanted to replace the phrase “safeguard” with “respect” the Constitution in the oath sworn by new MPs.
The party campaigned on a platform of amending undemocratic articles within the document—such as the 25 percent of parliamentary seats reserved for military appointees—but face a struggle as any change requires 75 percent of the legislature’s approval.
But Suu Kyi denied that she was backing down over the issue. “Politics is an issue of give and take,” she said. “We are not giving up, we are just yielding to the aspirations of the people.”
Nyan Win, a spokesperson for the NLD, told The Irrawaddy that his party’s members will join the Parliament on Wednesday. Most MP-elects will travel to Naypyidaw on Tuesday, but Suu Kyi has said that she will go to the capital early on Wednesday before swearing-in.
Meanwhile, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon delivered a historic speech within the Burmese Parliament on Monday. He called for international trade sanctions against Burma to be further reduced and is due to meet with Suu Kyi on Tuesday.

 


German FM visits Myanmar to start new chapter of cooperation

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/german-fm-visits-myanmar-to-start-new.html [/postlink] Sunday 29th April, 2012 (ANI)

Yangon, Apr 29 (Xinhua-ANI): German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle arrived Yangon Sunday as part of his trip to Southeast Asia to start a new chapter of cooperation with Myanmar, official sources said.

Westerwelle's visit came a day after an Office of the 27-member European Union (EU) to Myanmar was inaugurated by its Foreign Policy Chief Catherine Ashton on Saturday who is visiting Myanmar for three days until Monday.

Westerwelle will first meet Aung San Suu Kyi, leader of the National League for Democracy (NLD) and parliament representative- elect, shortly after his arrival in Yangon according to schedule.

Westerwelle will travel to Nay Pyi Taw on Monday and call on Myanmar President U Thein Sein to voice support to the country's historic reform process and encourage more reform.

Germany announced decision to resume full-scale development aid to Myanmar following that of the European Union to suspend sanctions against the country for one year.

Germany is known as the second-largest donor to Myanmar after Japan with Myanmar still owing it an estimated 700 million euro in unpaid debt, according to German sources.

EU foreign ministers announced in Luxemburg on April 23 suspension of most sanctions against Myanmar for a year but retained an embargo on arms sale in recognition of its rapid political and economic reforms.

EU's suspension of sanctions rather than complete lifting include that of a ban on investment and trade related to timber and mining.

Sanctions targeted more than 800 companies and nearly 500 people and included the withholding of some development aid.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Treasury has relaxed some sanctions on Myanmar to allow financial transactions to support certain humanitarian and development projects.

Japan has also announced that it will write off 300 billion yen (about 3.7 billion U.S. dollars) debt of Myanmar and resume development aid to support the country's democratic and economic reforms. (Xinhua-ANI)

U.N. chief visits Myanmar to press further reform

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/un-chief-visits-myanmar-to-press.html [/postlink] Sunday 29th April, 2012 (Source: West Australian)

YANGON (Reuters) - U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon made a landmark visit to a fast-changing Myanmar on Sunday to encourage its government to carry out more democratic reforms and shore-up peace deals with ethnic rebel groups.
Ban's trip was his first since a reformist, quasi-civilian government took office a year ago, ending five decades of authoritarian military rule and frosty and frustrating ties with the international community.
His trip coincides with a visit by EU Foreign Policy chief Catherine Ashton to open a "new chapter" of relations as European firms seek a share of Myanmar's vast untapped natural resources.
Myanmar, which is still led by remnants of the former junta, has stunned the outside world with economic reforms and unprecedented engagement with the West, the political opposition and ethnic minority rebel groups, moves Ban said were encouraging, but still not enough.
"We see Myanmar is reopening to the world," he said earlier in New York, adding that "the fresh start is still fragile".
A string of Western politicians, including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and British Prime Minister David Cameron, have travelled to Myanmar in recent months to encourage it to stay on the path of reform.
Ban arrived in the commercial capital Yangon and will see a country that has undergone astonishing changes since his last visit in July 2009 on the invitation of former junta strongman Senior General Than Shwe, which was widely seen as a stunt to boost the regime's credibility at home.
Ban left frustrated, describing it as a "very difficult mission" having failed to convince Than Shwe to release political prisoners and being denied access to Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who was in detention at the time but was released 15 months later.
Since Than Shwe stepped aside on March 30 last year, four months after an election seen as rigged, its former fourth-in-command Thein Sein has become president and has brought Suu Kyi into the political fold.
His government has started overhauling the tattered economy, easing media censorship, legalising trade unions and protests, freeing political prisoners and agreeing ceasefires with more than a dozen ethnic rebel armies.
Thein Sein is planning to restructure negotiating teams after a failure to make a breakthrough in six rounds of talks with Kachin rebels and their political leaders, two sources close to the peace effort told Reuters.
Ban was due on Monday meet Thein Sein and other former generals who were part of Than Shwe's inner circle but now seen as key drivers behind Myanmar's stunning facelift, which has led to an easing of some sanctions this month by the European Union, United States, Australia and Canada and a resumption of aid and debt relief by Japan.
Ban was scheduled to fly to the remote capital Naypyitaw later Sunday. His visit will include a trip to northern Shan State, one of the world's biggest opium-growing regions, where the United Nations has started poppy eradication programme it says has seen significant progress.
Ban is also due to discuss a census the United Nations is helping Myanmar to compile by 2014, its first in over 30 years and is scheduled to give an address to Myanmar's huge new parliament on Monday, the first by a foreigner.
Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party was due to make its debut in parliament last week after an historic by-April 1 by-election win, but it is still refusing to take its seat because of a potentially troublesome dispute over the wording of a swearing-in oath.
(Additional reporting by Louis Charbonneau at the United Nations; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Myanmar changes bring new ASEAN-EU chapter

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/myanmar-changes-bring-new-asean-eu.html [/postlink] By Martin Abbugao | AFP News

Europe and Southeast Asia on Friday pushed for a new chapter in relations, as Myanmar embraces democratic reforms and the EU seeks growth markets amid its crippling debt crisis.

Foreign ministers and senior diplomats from the two regions met in the oil-rich sultanate Brunei to chart ways to boost cooperation in areas ranging from trade to disaster management and security.

"Developing our relations with Asia across the board is a major strategic objective for the European Union," EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said at a news conference after the meeting.

"The European Union has a strong stake in ASEAN's success," she said, referring to the 10-member Association of

Southeast Asian Nations, a potential market of nearly 600 million people.

Unlike in the previous meetings clouded by disagreements on how to deal with ASEAN member Myanmar's poor human rights record, diplomats said this year's gathering marked a fresh chapter in region-to-region ties.

"You can feel it in the atmosphere of the meetings," a Southeast Asian diplomat told AFP.

Over the past year Myanmar's quasi-civilian government, led by President Thein Sein, an ex-general, has taken steps to address criticism about the country's poor human rights record and suppression of political dissent.

It has freed hundreds of political prisoners, eased media restrictions and welcomed Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition back into politics.

Myanmar held historic by-elections on April 1 in which Suu Kyi won a seat in parliament, and has floated its currency and signalled it is ready to accept more foreign investment.

Ashton said she will travel to Myanmar on Saturday and open an EU office which would be the "first step" toward establishing a full delegation.

But economists said Europe's economic woes had also spurred the continent to bolster ties with Southeast Asia, which groups Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

"The EU economy is in the middle of a protracted economic slump -- which will be Europe's 'lost decade' -- forcing the EU to desperately seek new growth markets for EU exports," said Rajiv Biswas, chief Asia-Pacific economist at IHS Global Insight.

"Secondly, ASEAN has emerged as a more powerful regional bloc," he told AFP.

"For EU companies facing weak growth prospects in their home markets, the ASEAN region is a highly attractive market, with rapid economic growth and a fast-growing consumer middle class."

Justin Harper, market strategist at IG Markets Singapore, said: "Given the government debt crisis within the eurozone, the EU will need ASEAN more than ASEAN needs the EU."
Among the European ministers in Brunei were British Foreign Secretary William Hague and German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, who also heads to Myanmar this weekend.

Harper said however it was still "early days" and Myanmar needs to do more for ties with the West to fully bloom.

"So while Myanmar is no longer a thorn in the side, the wounds haven't yet healed," Harper said.

ASEAN secretary general Surin Pitsuwan meanwhile said in a Twitter message that the EU would sign an ASEAN-initiated non-aggression pact at a July meeting in Cambodia.

The treaty bans signatories from using violence to settle conflicts in the region.

But the bigger prize is that signing the treaty is one condition for entry into the East Asia Summit, a forum of countries including the 10-member ASEAN bloc, China, India, Russia and the United States.

"The European Union wants to be an active and constructive player in Asian regionalism, including by taking part in the East Asia Summit," Ashton said.

World Bank to open an office in Myanmar

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/world-bank-to-open-office-in-myanmar.html [/postlink]

 

This picture shows workers carrying bricks with bamboo framework from a boat at the harbor in Yangon. The World Bank announced on April 26, 2012 that it would open an office in Myanmar, nearly two decades after its last projects in the country. (YE AUNG THU/AFP/Getty Images)

 

The World Bank will open an office in Myanmar, two decades after its last project in the country.

The World Bank indicated on Thursday that it will open an office in Myanmar in June, moving to re-engage with the country two decades after its last projects there ended, said the Associated Press.
Pamela Cox, the bank's regional vice president in East Asia, said the bank would examine Myanmar's development needs.
Cox said, "We've been working very closely with our board and our shareholders, the other bilateral partners, the IMF, and, of course, the government of Myanmar on plans for moving our relationship forward," according to Reuters.
She pointed out that the country, also known as Burma, was emerging from decades of international isolation with huge unpaid debts. According to Reuters, Myanmar's arrears amount to $393 million to the World Bank and $500 million to the Asian Development Bank.

Pakistan deports Bin Laden's family to Saudi Arabia

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/pakistan-deports-bin-laden-family-to.html [/postlink] 27 April 2012 / REUTERS, ISLAMABAD


Policemen cover the vehicle carrying the family members of Osama bin Laden with cloth to avoid the media before they leave for the airport in islamabad april 26, 2012.
The family of al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden, who was killed almost a year ago by American special forces in a military town in northwest Pakistan, left the country for Saudi Arabia early on Friday morning, the family lawyer told Reuters.
The move ends months of speculation about the fate of the three widows and 11 children, who were detained by Pakistani security forces after the May 2 raid.   
"Yes, they're being deported to Saudi Arabia," said Aamir Khalil, the family lawyer. "It is a special flight."   
Once outside Pakistan, the family could reveal details about how the world's most wanted man was able to hide there for years, possibly assisted by elements of the powerful Pakistani military and spy agency.   
Any revelations about ties to bin Laden could embarrass Pakistan and anger Washington, which had been hunting bin Laden since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.   
The plane took off at around 1:30 a.m. (2030 GMT) for Saudi Arabia, according to local TV channels.    
Yemen's ambassador to Islamabad said the family, including his Yemeni wife, Amal al-Sadeh and her children, was heading to Saudi Arabia's Red Sea city of Jeddah.   
"The plane carrying Amal and (her brother) Zakariya al-Sadeh and the rest of the family are heading to Jeddah," Ambassador Abdo Ali Abdulrahman told Reuters by telephone early on Friday. "This chapter that has continued for a year is now closed."   
Saudi officials were not immediately available for comment.   
A Yemeni foreign ministry source said Sadeh and her children had travelled to Saudi Arabia at the request of the bin Laden family to sort out their residency there and would go to Yemen later, without saying whether this would be to stay or to visit.   
At the house in Islamabad where the family had been held, a white minivan pulled up to take them to the airport. The women refused to enter the van with a crush of media around it, so officials covered its windows with plastic sheets.   
The Interior Ministry, which was in charge of the family, said in a statement it had "passed orders for the deportation of 14 members of OBL family in pursuance of the Court orders".   
"The family was kept safe and sound in a guest house ... They have been deported to the country of their choice, Saudi Arabia, today," it said.   
Apart from the three widows, the deportees included seven children and four grandchildren.   
Earlier this month, a court sentenced the women to 45 days in prison for entering Pakistan illegally. It ordered their deportation after the end of the prison term, which began on March 3 when they were formally arrested.   
Pakistani officials describe bin Laden's long presence in the hill town of Abbottabad as a security lapse and reject suggestions that members of the military and intelligence service were complicit in hiding him there. 

Analysts Say North Korea's New Missiles Are Fakes

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/analysts-say-north-korea-new-missiles.html [/postlink] TOKYO April 26, 2012 (AP)

In this photo taken, April 15, 2012, what appears to be a new missile is carried during a mass military parade at the Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the country's founding father Kim Il Sung. (Ng Han Guan/AP Photo)

Analysts who have studied photos of a half-dozen ominous new North Korean missiles showcased recently at a lavish military parade say they were fakes, and not very convincing ones, casting further doubt on the country's claims of military prowess.

Since its recent rocket launch failure, Pyongyang's top military leaders have made several boastful statements about its weapons capabilities. On Wednesday, Vice Marshal Ri Yong Ho claimed his country is capable of defeating the United States "at a single blow." And on Monday, North Korea promised "special actions" that would reduce Seoul's government to ashes within minutes.

But the weapons displayed April 15 appear to be a mishmash of liquid-fuel and solid-fuel components that could never fly together. Undulating casings on the missiles suggest the metal is too thin to withstand flight. Each missile was slightly different from the others, even though all were supposedly the same make. They don't even fit the launchers they were carried on.

"There is no doubt that these missiles were mock-ups," Markus Schiller and Robert Schmucker, of Germany's Schmucker Technologie, wrote in a paper posted recently on the website Armscontrolwonk.com that listed those discrepancies. "It remains unknown if they were designed this way to confuse foreign analysts, or if the designers simply did some sloppy work."

The missiles, called KN-08s, were loaded onto the largest mobile launch vehicles North Korea has ever unveiled. Pyongyang gave them special prominence by presenting them at the end of the parade, which capped weeks of celebrations marking the 100th anniversary of the country's founding father, Kim Il Sung.

The unveiling created an international stir. The missiles appeared to be new, and designed for long-range attacks.

That's a big concern because, along with developing nuclear weapons, North Korea has long been suspected of trying to field an intercontinental ballistic missile, or ICBM, capable of reaching the United States. Washington contends that North Korea's failed April 13 rocket launch was an attempt to test missile technology rather than the scientific mission Pyongyang claims.

But after poring over close-up photos of the missiles, Schiller and Schmucker, whose company has advised NATO on missile issues, argue the mock-ups indicate North Korea is a long way from having a credible ICBM.

"There is still no evidence that North Korea actually has a functional ICBM," they concluded, adding that the display was a "dog and pony show" and suggesting North Korea may not be making serious progress toward its nuclear-tipped ICBM dreams.

North Korea has a particularly bad track record with ICBM-style rockets. Its four launches since 1998 — three of which it claimed carried satellites — have all ended in failure.

Though North Korea frequently overstates its military capabilities, the missiles displayed this month might foreshadow weapons it is still working on.

David Wright, a physicist with the Union of Concerned Scientists who has written extensively about North Korea's missile program, said he believes the KN-08s could be "somewhat clumsy representations of a missile that is being developed."

Wright noted that the first signs the outside world got of North Korea's long-range Taepodong-2 missile — upon which the recent failed rocket was based — was from mock-ups seen in 1994, 12 years before it was actually tested on the launch pad.

"To understand whether there is a real missile development program in place, we are trying to understand whether the mock-ups make sense as the design for a real missile," he said. "It is not clear that it has a long enough range to make sense for North Korea to invest a lot of effort in."

Theodore Postol, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and former scientific adviser to the U.S. Chief of Naval Operations, said the Taepodong-2 design remains the more real future threat — though even that remains at least a decade away — and the KN-08 is simply a smoke screen.

"I believe that these missiles are not only mock-ups, but they are very unlikely to be actual mock-ups of any missiles in design," he said. "Fabricating a missile like the KN-08 would require a gigantic indigenous technical effort. ... The only way North Korea could develop such a missile with its pitiful economy would be if someone gave it to them."
                 He noted that a comparable U.S. missile, the Minuteman III, required "decades of expertise in rocket motors, and vast sums of intellectual, technological and financial capital."

Much attention, meanwhile, has been given to the 16-wheel mobile launchers that carried the missiles during the parade, which experts believe may have included a chassis built in China. That raises questions of whether China has violated U.N. sanctions against selling missile-related technology to Pyongyang.

Some missile experts say the launchers were designed to carry a larger missile than the 18-meter-long KN-08, and argue that North Korea would not have spent millions of dollars on them unless it has, or intends to have, a big missile to put on them.

But Wright said the launchers, like the missiles they carried, could also have been more for show than anything else.

"Given the international attention it has gotten from parading these missiles you could argue that the cost of buying the large trucks — which add a lot of credibility to the images of the missiles — was money well spent in terms of projecting an image of power," he said.

(This version CORRECTS spelling in paragraph 8 to "poring")

By ERIC TALMADGE Associated Press     

Eye on unrest, US rules out end to Myanmar sanctions

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/eye-on-unrest-us-rules-out-end-to.html [/postlink]
Ethnic Koe Kant children play in front of their house at a village near Lashio, northern Shan state, in March. The United States on Wednesday ruled out an immediate end to its main sanctions on Myanmar, saying it wanted to preserve leverage to push the regime on ending ethnic violence and other key issues

The United States ruled out an immediate end to its main sanctions on Myanmar, saying it wanted to preserve leverage to push the regime on ending ethnic violence and other key issues.
The European Union and Canada this week suspended most sanctions and Japan waived Myanmar's debt as rewards after a dramatic year of reforms in which President Thein Sein freed political prisoners and reached out to opponents.
President Barack Obama's administration has taken a lead in negotiating with Myanmar and has eased some restrictions, including ending a ban on financial transactions by US non-governmental organizations.
But Kurt Campbell, a key architect of the US outreach to Myanmar, on Wednesday told cautious lawmakers that the administration had no "gauzy gaze and rose-colored glasses" and would only ease sanctions in "certain prescribed areas."
"I would simply say that there is no intention to 'lift' sanctions," Campbell, the assistant secretary of state for East Asian affairs, told the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
"We recognize very clearly that there have to be provisions and capabilities to be able to respond if there is a reversal or a stalling out (of reforms), that leverage is an essential component of our strategy," he said.
Campbell hailed actions taken by Thein Sein, including the decision to allow April 1 elections that gave Aung San Suu Kyi -- who spent most of the past two decades under house arrest -- a seat in parliament.
But Campbell said reforms have mostly impacted urban and Burman-majority areas and have not been felt by ethnic minorities in the country formerly known as Burma, which has some of the world's longest-running separatist conflicts.
"We need to ensure that that process extends into the country as a whole and we are troubled by very clear -- and we believe reliable -- reports of continuing attacks and atrocities that are completely antithetical to the overall effort that we're seeking to achieve," he said.
Human rights groups have voiced particular concern about allegations of rape, forced labor and other abuses in Kachin state, where troops appeared to ignore Thein Sein's orders in December to halt violence.
Campbell also warned Myanmar to sever any lingering relationship with North Korea, warning that any signs of military cooperation "will put a brake" on US engagement.
"I can't say it any more directly -- that countries are judged by the company they keep," he said.
The United States maintains strict sanctions against exports from Myanmar, including on gems, lumber and other lucrative products seen as sources of funding for the long-dominant military.
Human rights campaigners have pressed the US administration and Congress not to go as far as the European Union, which froze virtually all sanctions, albeit for an initial one-year period and with a continued embargo on weapons sales.
Representative Don Manzullo, a Republican who heads the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on East Asia, questioned whether "our European and Asian allies have gone too far by rushing head-long into suspending all sanctions and immediately boosting assistance."
Representative Joe Crowley, an architect of US sanctions on Myanmar who visited in January, estimated there were still at least several hundred political prisoners and deplored "serious acts of violence against ethnic nationalities."
"A lot of the media coverage around Burma lately has been overheated, if not slightly overstated," he said at the hearing.

By Shaun Tandon | AFP – 10 hours ago

The Road to Naypyidaw

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/the-road-to-naypyidaw.html [/postlink] April 26, 2012, 8:49 am

European Pressphoto Agency
Empty seats in Myanmar’s Parliament on Monday.

NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar — The 43 seats of Parliament that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and the other newly elected members of her National League for Democracy (N.L.D.) were supposed to fill on Monday remain empty. After winning by-elections by a landslide earlier this month, the Lady and her party are refusing to show up for their first legislative session in protest over having to take a pledge to “safeguard” the 2008 Constitution.
Myanmar’s Constitution grants the military vast powers in the country’s purportedly civilian and democratic institutions. Twenty-five percent of the seats in Parliament are set aside for members of the army. Since any change to the Constitution requires a 75 percent majority, the quota in effect gives the military veto power over the amendment process.
The N.L.D. had boycotted parliamentary elections in 2010 partly because of a similar oath of allegiance required under the party-registration law in force at the time. This past November, after consultations with Aung San Suu Kyi and President Thein Sein, Parliament agreed to ask instead that candidates vow to “respect” the Constitution. But it left untouched the oath of office required of legislators.
In this untested quasi-democratic system, Aung San Suu Kyi has few arms but principles and values. But is she overplaying her hand by taking such a firm position on the small, if symbolic, matter of the oath? The tiff is already calling into question whether she and the the N.L.D. stand a chance of changing the system from within and of making headway on more important and more controversial issues.

Members of the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party (U.S.D.P.), which controls about 55 percent of Parliament, greeted the N.L.D.’s absence on Monday with a mix of indifference and elation. After enduring the sight of Aung San Suu Kyi campaigning to adoring crowds across the country throughout the year and suffering an astounding defeat earlier this month — the N.L.D. won 43 of the 45 seats contested — they are now relishing the fact that it’s the N.L.D. that’s keeping itself out of Parliament.
“More than 1,000 MPs elected in the 2010 elections took the same oath of office. Why should that be changed now just for the new 43 MPs?” asked Aung Thaung, an influential U.S.D.P. member who was a high-ranking member of the previous military regime and is suspected of organizing a brutal attack on Aung San Suu Kyi’s motorcade in northern Myanmar in 2003.
The Lady is picking a fight? Why not stare her down? Rewording the oath will likely require some onerous steps: a constitutional amendment, massive approval in Parliament, perhaps even a national referendum. The N.L.D. had hoped that President Thein Sein could talk the Constitutional Court into changing the controversial wording, but the court demurred, claiming that its role is to interpret, not change, the Constitution.
This leaves both sides in a tricky situation. The government is in good standing with the international community these days; on Monday it was rewarded for a slew of recent reforms with the formal easing of many long-standing sanctions. But a protracted standoff would undermine its still-fragile legitimacy. And it could cast doubt over President Thein Sein’s recent promise that ”there won’t be any u-turn” in the democratization process.
The stakes may be higher still for the N.L.D. Many people here are bewildered by the oath issue: what, exactly, is the difference between “safeguarding” and “respecting” the Constitution, and is it worth fighting over? If the party refuses to back down on a matter this trivial, it risks losing the public’s heartfelt support, which is its greatest political asset.
The Lady’s party apparently has no clear strategy for getting out of this impasse other than to await a benign intervention from President Thein Sein with the U.S.D.P.
Score 1 for top-down reform. Score 0 for the Burmese Spring.

By SWE WIN

The US are cautious in easing Burma ban

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/the-us-are-cautious-in-easing-burma-ban.html [/postlink]

Updated: 21:26, Thursday April 26, 2012


The United States says it will ease its investment ban in Burma carefully, noting that recent democratic reforms there are reversible and deplorable rights violations persist.
The top US diplomat for East Asia, Kurt Campbell, says the US remains troubled by Burma's military trade with North Korea.
His cautious comments come as human rights groups voice increasing concern that the US, European Union and other nations are moving too fast to relax economic sanctions to reward Burma's shift from five decades of authoritarian rule.
The EU this week suspended its economic sanctions and Japan said it would forgive more than three billion dollars in Burma's debt, following recent special elections that saw democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi's party sweep most of the contested seats.
Mr Campbell said despite the releases of more than 500 political prisoners since last October, at least several hundred are still behind bars.

Myanmar to buy electricity from China

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/myanmar-to-buy-electricity-from-china.html [/postlink] Thursday 26th April, 2012 (IANS)

Myanmar will buy back 100 megawatts of electricity from China, a major investor in the country's hydro-power projects and receives bulk of the power generated from these plants.

The move will help mitigate the power crisis in the Yangon region, Power Minister Nyan Tun Oo said in reply to questions by Yangon Assembly legislators Wednesday, Mizzima News reported.

"We had to implement load shedding system this year because the power demand has increased," he said.

"We reduced the power supply to industrial zones to augment the shortages in residential areas," Nyan said.

Inadequate grid system and outdated infrastructure have compounded the power problem.

The minister said the power demand in the Yangon region was about 600 megawatts, but it has increased to 700 megawatts this year.

Nyan said the government will boost gas supply to the power plants in Kyunchaung, Mann, Shwetaung, Myanaung and Thaton so they can run in full capacity to generate more power. Currently, the plants are running below capacity due to lack of gas.

The government will also build more power stations for supplying electricity to factories, businesses and residential areas, he added.

--Indo-Asian news Service

North Korea prepares for nuclear test

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/north-korea-prepares-for-nuclear-test.html [/postlink]

North Korea has almost completed preparations for a third nuclear test, a senior source with close ties to Pyongyang and Beijing told Reuters, which will draw further international condemnation following a failed rocket launch if it goes ahead, Apr. 24.

Myanmar's military moves amid Suu Kyi no-show

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/myanmar-military-moves-amid-suu-kyi-no.html [/postlink]
Wed Apr 25, 2012 9:07am BST

Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi smiles at her supporters as she leaves a monastery after attending a religious ceremony at Yangon April 24, 2012

.(Reuters) - A political stalemate preventing the long-awaited parliamentary debut of Myanmar's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi coincides with an apparent attempt by the powerful military to bolster its influence in the legislature.

Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy (NLD) colleagues swept 43 of 45 seats contested in April 1 by-elections but now she and other NLD MPs elect are refusing to swear a parliamentary oath to "safeguard" a 2008 constitution, which they say is undemocratic.


They want the word in the oath changed to "respect."
The stalemate has unsettled party faithful who are eager for the NLD to help tackle their country's myriad problems, while perplexing analysts who say the NLD's gambit risks being seen as pedantic, ill-timed, and needlessly confrontational.

"It's a very high-risk strategy for political gains that are not quite clear," says Richard Horsey, a former United Nations official in Myanmar. "It's wasting precious time that could be spent on actual policymaking."
The NLD is holding its ground in the evident hope that a deal can be brokered with the help of reformist President Thein Sein and the speakers of the upper and lower houses.

"Different views are the essence of democracy," says Myat Nyana Soe, a member of parliament who recently switched parties to join the NLD. "We hope the majority will respect the view of the minority."
The NLD's no-show coincides with an effort by the military to strengthen its position in parliament, where its officers are guaranteed a quarter of seats under the constitution.

Fifty-nine majors were replaced with senior officers ranked from lieutenant colonel to brigadier general, Myanmar's election commission announced on April 22.

The move anticipates the eventual arrival of the NLD's small but vocal contingent.

"It's quite clear that the replacement of these young majors with higher ranking officials is to make military representation stronger and make their voice heard louder inside the parliament," said a lower house member, who declined to be identified.

The oath stalemate will mystify many in Myanmar, an impoverished country of 60 million people where fretting about constitutional semantics comes a very distant second to daily concerns about lack of jobs, healthcare and educational opportunities.

But Suu Kyi's passion for changing the constitution, which also allows the president to hand power to the armed forces chief in an ill-defined emergency, should come as no surprise.

The drafting of the constitution was tightly controlled by the military, which ruled harshly for nearly 50 years following a 1962 coup, and guarantees it a leading role in politics.

Now, after the military officially stepped back in favour of a reformist, quasi-civilian government, a new confrontation could be looming.

While Suu Kyi has recently hinted at the need for the military to get out of politics, the armed forces commander has spoken of the need for the military to protect the constitution that gives it a "leadership role".

One of Suu Kyi's main promises during her election campaign was to amend the constitution, while NLD campaign manager Nyan Win told Reuters in March that charter change would be Suu Kyi's "very first priority" upon entering parliament.

"SHOULD BE IN PARLIAMENT"
The NLD convincingly won an election in 1990, but the military junta annulled the result and mercilessly persecuted Suu Kyi and her supporters. Since then, Suu Kyi's party has consistently refused to participate in junta-backed initiatives.

In 1995, NLD members walked out of a constitution-drafting assembly convened by the junta. They also boycotted 2010 elections that were widely criticised as rigged in favour of the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which now dominates parliament.

In 1998, between spells under house arrest, she sat in a car for six days on a country road after police stopped her visiting party members. Diplomats said she used that stand-off to undermine the ruling junta's claim that she was free to move about the country.

What she hopes to prove from the standoff over the oath eludes even potential allies. "The oath is nothing," says Zung Hlei Thang, an MP with the ethnic Chin Progressive Party. "It doesn't create any hindrance for amending the constitution."

"The NLD should be in parliament, where they can raise any issue - corruption, rule of law and, of course, amending the constitution," said Kyaw Zwa Moe, managing editor of Irrawaddy Publishing Group, a news organisation founded by Myanmar exiles in Thailand.

He suspected the decision was a last-minute one taken in the euphoric wake of the by-elections, in which the NLD trounced its arch-rival, the USDP.

MP Myat Nyana Soe said the decision was made by the party's Central Executive Committee. Four of its seven members are MPs elect, including Suu Kyi.

The stalemate could also be testing voters' faith in Suu Kyi, who is widely revered in Myanmar. "People are quite worried that their vote will be useless," says Nyo Ohn Myint, an exiled NLD leader.


Aye Maung, of the Rakhine Nationalities Development Party, played down the standoff. He noted that a foreign investment law was the only major legislation to be decided before parliament's current session expires at the end of April, and that all sides had "plenty of time" to work out a compromise.

But USDP secretary general Htay Oo told Reuters on Monday his party would not introduce any proposal to change the oath. "The wording would have no impact on the development of the country," he said.

While the NLD's seats lie empty, the military's decision to fill its quota with higher-ranking delegates was an "obvious recognition" of parliament's growing importance, said Horsey.

The soldier-delegates were now "thinking for themselves and are allowed to vote independently," he said. "They're studying the issues. In that case, is it really captains and majors you want?"
NLD member Nyo Ohn Myint saw the hand of retired dictator Senior General Than Shwe in the newly appointed military delegates.
"They are all hardliners," he said. "General Than Shwe has woken up and might take the opportunity to derail the democratic process."

(Additional reporting by Stuart Grudgings and Thu Rein Hlaing in Naypyitaw; Editing by Robert Birsel)

Myanmar can become Asian tiger— UN official

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N. Korea: 'Mobile weapons' capable of striking US

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/n-korea-weapons-capable-of-striking-us.html [/postlink] Associated Press – 3 hrs ago

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) — A senior North Korean army official says his country is armed with "powerful mobile weapons" capable of striking America.
Vice Marshal Ri Yong Ho emphasized the importance of defending the North against the U.S. and South Korea as Pyongyang marked the 80th anniversary of the nation's army Wednesday.
He told officials at the April 25 House of Culture that the weapons could defeat the U.S. "at a single blow."
North Korea made another unusual claim Monday, promising "special actions" that would reduce Seoul's government to ashes.
North Korea is believed to have nuclear weapons but not the technology to put them on long-range missiles. A rocket launch that the U.S. claimed was a North Korean attempt to test missile technology failed this month.

Osama Bin Laden Wanted 9/11 Follow-Up to Doom Economy, Terrorist Says

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Saajid Muhammad Badat shoe bomber is seen in this undated booking photo. (AP Photo)

A convicted terrorist said that shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks, Osama bin Laden told him that the next attack would strike a fatal blow to the American economy.
In a video testimony played in a New York court Monday, Saajid Badat, who was convicted in London of a December 2001 plot to blow up a U.S.-bound flight with a bomb in his shoes, recounted his meeting with the al Qaeda leader just after the 9/11 attacks.
"So he said the American economy is like a chain," Badat said. "If you break one -- one link of the chain, the whole economy will be brought down. So after [the] Sept. 11 attacks, this operation will ruin the aviation industry and in turn the whole economy will come down."
By "this operation," Badat was apparently referring to his own mission -- the destruction of an American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami just three months after 9/11. Badat backed out of the plot at the last minute, but another convicted terrorist, Richard Reid, attempted to go through with it on Dec. 22, 2001. The explosives hidden in his shoes, however, did not ignite and Reid was arrested.

Terror Suspect: 'I'm Very Tired' Watch Video

Terror Suspect Denies al Qaeda Ties Watch Video

Badat's testimony came as part of the trial of Adis Medunjanin, who stands accused of plotting to attack New York's subway system with suicide bombs in 2009. The admitted ringleader of that plot, Najibullah Zazi, broke down in tears on the stand last week while testifying against his comrade.
When asked then by the prosecutor if he still considered Medunjanin a good friend, Zazi began to cry, and said, "I love him." Zazi's tears became sobs when he was asked if he believed Medunjanin intended to carry out the suicide bombings. Zazi hung his head, and after a short pause, whispered, "yes."

Officials previously told ABC News that documents recovered in the Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden nearly a year ago showed that the terror leader grew increasingly frustrated with his organization's inability to pull off other another attack on the scale of 9/11.
After it was revealed that bin Laden plotted to kill President Barack Obama and then-military commander David Petraeus, one national security official said bin Laden "clearly had bold ambitions to kill as many innocent people as possible. But al Qaeda's capabilities did not match Bin Laden's intent. Leading up to and since bin Laden's death we know that al Qaeda's capacity to pull off those types of complex attacks has been greatly diminished, and that Bin Laden himself spent much of his time brooding and providing guidance that often fell on deaf ears."
ABC News' Brittany Auger, Jake Tapper and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Myanmar reforms reveal 'strong golf culture'

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/myanmar-reforms-reveal-golf-culture.html [/postlink] By Talek Harris | AFP News – 4 hours ago


Asian Tour executive chairman Kyi Hla Han at the World Golf American Express Championship in 2000. "People don't realise how popular golf is in Myanmar. They don't know that we already have such a strong golf culture," Han told AFP

After decades in the shadows, Myanmar's sudden opening-up to the outside is shining a new light on the country -- and revealing, amongst other things, one of Asia's most vibrant golf communities.
Behind Myanmar's "bamboo curtain", golf, a relic of British colonialism, has been an enduring pastime with scores of public courses -- often with green fees as low as $5 -- and a dozen driving ranges in Yangon alone.
According to Asian Tour executive chairman Kyi Hla Han, a highly successful Myanmar golfer who first represented his country at the 1980 World Cup, many visitors are taken aback when they see the extent of the country's facilities.
"People don't realise how popular golf is in Myanmar. They don't know that we already have such a strong golf culture," Han told AFP.
"There are lots of public courses. It's like Scotland, or Australia. You don't have to be a member, you can just turn up and play."
Han estimated there were up to 80 courses in Myanmar, formerly called Burma, which borders Thailand and has an estimated population of 54 million. Its golf-playing history of 100 years is among the longest in Asia.
Now the relaxation of military-ruled Myanmar in politics and border controls is expected to bring an influx of investment including plush new golf resorts, greater prize money and more opportunities for the country's players.
"It's great news now that the country is opening up for business and I think once the economy gets better and a lot of middle class people are able to afford playing, I'm sure they're going to pick up golf," said Han.
"Because there's a lot of facilities. Most of the courses are actually public courses so you can just pay and play. So it's just a matter of the economy getting better and people being able to afford to play.
"But we've always had a good history of golf being played there so it's not like Vietnam, or Cambodia, or even China -- we've been playing golf for the last 100 years. So the potential is great."
Golf was first played in Myanmar by the British military, who left behind several courses when the country gained independence in 1948. Since then, it has remained mainly the preserve of the military and business elite.
But Han said it was just a matter of time before Myanmar's economy improves, swelling the middle class and leading more people to seek out golf, as has happened in other growing Asian countries.
Zaw Moe, another of Myanmar's golf exports, said the country already had lots of talented young players who were working with coaches and benefiting from modern training methods and facilities.
It's a far cry from Moe's early days, when he hit balls into the jungle and picked up tips from caddies after starting to play at the age of 13.
"In my home town we have a nine-hole golf course and my father and mother played so I went with them. Somebody taught me the grip and I just picked it up," he said.
"My course didn't have a driving range. We just hit our own balls and asked the caddie to pick them up. We'd hit it into the jungle or on the fairway.
"We'd go and practise when the members weren't playing, so I would play in the early mornings or sometimes at night. When the members had finished, I could hit balls on the fairway."
Moe was forced to leave Myanmar in 1990 to seek out playing opportunities, and he moved to Malaysia, before spending 11 years on the Japanese tour. But he believes the next generation of Myanmar golfers will have it easier.
"It will take time. At the moment only the politics has changed. Everything will have to settle down and afterwards they (players) will come up. But it's looking very good for the future in Myanmar at the moment," he said.
Han said he now expected more prize money for the Asian Tour's $300,000 Myanmar Open, currently backed by domestic companies, as multinationals become involved. There are also about eight domestic events.
"We have our Myanmar Open and we hope to make that a bigger and better tournament next year. I think it will grow more," said Han.
"The businessmen there have been supporting it to help Myanmar and if multinationals come in... and I'm sure it's well supported by government officials. We see a good future for golf in Myanmar.
"Hopefully they can get one more (international) tournament in Myanmar. That would be nice for Myanmar and all the players over there."

Nay Bala Win Myint and Yan Naing Phyoe of Myanmar (right) hold the trophy for the Zaykabar Myanmar Open at the Royal Mingalardon Golf and Country Club in Yangon. After decades in the shadows, Myanmar's sudden opening-up to the outside is shining a new light on the country -- and revealing, amongst other things, one of Asia's most vibrant golf communities

UN chief to visit Myanmar, praises democratic reform there

[postlink] https://burmacampaignjapanteam.blogspot.com/2012/04/un-chief-to-visit-myanmar-praises.html [/postlink] April 24, 2012 2:50 pm

New York - UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said late Mondayhe would visit Myanmar at the invitation of the country's president,calling for him and the opposition to make more progress toward democratic reform.




Ban said he would leave New York this weekend, on his third visit to Myanmar, where he will meet with President Thein Sein and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and congratulate them personally for advancing democracy. He visited Myanmar in 2008 and 2009.



Ban said he welcomed the "positive international response" to Myanmar, including the United States’ and European Union’s decisions to suspend sanctions imposed previously on Myanmar to push for democratic reform.



"We need to see more such progress, more international support forMyanmar’s efforts to reform and bring about democratic change," Ban told reporters after meeting with the Group of Friends of Myanmar todiscuss his upcoming visit.



"On this visit, I look forward to personally congratulating President Thein Sein and Daw Aung San Suu Kyi," he said. "Working together, they have come far. Working together, I am confident that they will go further still." "And together, we will explore the many tangible and practic always in which the UN can help," he said. "The government of Myanmar and its people have embarked on a path of reconciliation,democratization and development to build a better future for all.They deserve our full support." //DPA

Can Burma’s President take part in current row over the oath?

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By Zin Linn Apr 24, 2012 9:16PM UTC


People of Burma reach at another political crossroads at this time. It is an excited moment for many citizens who hope for emergence of Democracy. The case is that the National League for Democracy (NLD) led by Aung San Suu Kyi did not attend on 23 April re-opening of Burma’s parliamentary session   by reason of a row over the oath of office for representatives-elect.

Aung San Suu Kyi, Chairperson of the NLD, was along with 43 parliamentarians elected from her National League for Democracy (NLD) party in April by-elections. The NLD’s MPs want to take oath using the word “respect”, rather than the wording of “safeguard” the constitution, which they state is undemocratic.

On 4 November 2011, Burma’s President Thein Sein had signed an amendment law on political parties in an obvious effort to persuade National League for Democracy party led by democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi to reregister as a party recognizing the new political structure.

Burma’s state-run TV and newspaper publicized on 6 November, 2011 that President Thein Sein has signed a law that amends three key areas of the Political Party Registration Law. Both houses of the Burmese Parliament had earlier endorsed the amendments.

In the previous law the wording said that all political parties must “protect” the State’s Constitution. In the amendment law the word “safeguard” was changed to “respect and abide” the Constitution.

According to the new law, previous two clauses were also changed. One clause said that serving prisoners are restricted from being a member of a political party and another clause said that a political party needs to contest in three parliamentary seats at least in an election.

At that time, analysts believe that the aim of amending the law is to pave the way for the National League for Democracy reregistering as a legal party. According to those amendments on political parties, the NLD took part in the April 1 by-elections that was the first electoral contest of its public reputation within a two-decade time.

President Thein Sein government seems to take advantage of bringing Suu Kyi and her party back into the current parliamentary structure which would make the government healthier authenticity at home and overseas.

However, Aung San Suu Kyi and members of her NLD party skipped their first appearance in parliament amid a row over a fidelity oath on 23 April.  The National League for Democracy (NLD) has objected to the oath that requires parliamentarians swearing to safeguard the country’s constitution. Instead, it was set to respect the charter, which however gives surety of military domination in parliaments.

Suu Kyi has said one of her priorities as an elected parliamentarian is to advocate an amendment of the 2008 constitution, under which 25 per cent of the parliament seats are reserved for unelected military officials.

In frequent media interviews, Suu Kyi expressed her aspiration to work together with the new government to push for some changes to help the people of Burma. Well-informed sources close to the government said that the government wanted Suu Kyi and members of her party in parliament to give itself legitimacy.

Most Burma watchers believe that the participation of 43 NLD legislators, including Suu Kyi in the existing parliament, would definitely improve the military-dominated government’s image and legitimacy.

But, there are some concerns among the public because of ruling party’s general secretary Htay Oo’s comments that it’s unnecessary to change the wording “respect” instead of “safeguard”.

Suu Kyi and 42 other elected lawmakers from her party were absent as the latest assembly session got under way in the capital, Naypyitaw, on Monday. The party had said it would not join until the oath issue was resolved.

Opposition spokesman Nyan Win told ‘The Associated Press’ that he believed the dispute would be solved within 10 days, and other party officials have said there is support within President Thein Sein’s government to change the oath.

The party was “not disappointed” with its current inability to sit in the legislative body, Nyan Win said. “We are cooperating with the government, so the problem will be overcome.”

Meanwhile in Luxembourg on Monday, the EU announced the suspension of most sanctions except an arms embargo against Myanmar for one year while it assesses the country’s progress, AP News said.

 Hkun Tun Oo, a senior Shan ethnic politician who released from jail in January, told The Associated Press the EU’s temporary suspension was the right move “because if things do not improve within a year, sanctions can be renewed.”

Analysts believe that Thein Sein knows well about Suu Kyi’s clout on the Western democracies and realize her contribution as essential, since Burma has been preparing to take ASEAN Chair in 2014, and it has also been trying entire ending of Western sanctions that hindering the country’s economic development since 1988.

If President Thein Sein ardently desired to pursue the irreversible democratic path, it would be his duty to act as mediator between his ruling party and the NLD chaired by Suu Kyi. Even though current wording deadlock for oath look like a row, as mediator, President has responsibility to address it.

In fact, he himself has signed a law that amends three key areas of the Political Party Registration Law last year. In the revision law the word “safeguard” was changed to “respect and abide” the Constitution

Burma exiles urge further US sanction

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Updated: 21:25, Tuesday April 24, 2012

The European Union's suspension of economic sanctions against Burma has riled exiled activists, who are urging the United States to press for further reforms before following suit.
The activists' opposition has exposed differences with democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, whose cause they have championed for more than two decades.
Suu Kyi endorsed the EU move during a visit by British Prime Minister David Cameron to Rangoon this month. They say changes have yet to affect the lives of most citizens and rampant rights abuses continue.
'The EU has suspended sanctions knowing that its own benchmarks on Burma have not been met: the unconditional release of all political prisoners and a cessation of attacks against ethnic minorities,' Soe Aung of the Forum for Democracy in Burma said by email from Thailand. He accused the bloc of rushing to reward 'murky reforms'.
'It's illogical and a little hypocritical,' Aung said.
While the influence of activists who escaped the country in the years following a 1988 crackdown on democracy protesters is waning as the country opens up, they remain players in the debate. Last week, a group were lobbying opinion-makers in Washington, including at the State Department and the World Bank.
They say foreign investment before rule of law is established in the impoverished country would do more harm than good and benefit only the military and its cronies who dominate the most lucrative sectors of the economy.
The Obama administration has taken the concerns seriously. While the US has led the charge in engaging Burma, it is moving more slowly than the EU in lifting sanctions. It is upgrading diplomatic ties and plans to allow US investment in some sectors, but only in areas it judges would benefit the broader population.
Congressional committees that oversee US policy toward Asia will take up the issue this week, hearing testimony by senior officials from the State Department, the US Agency for International Development and the Treasury Department.
Khin Ohmar, co-ordinator of Burma Partnership, a coalition of pro-democracy activists based in several Asian countries, said despite relaxation of restrictions on media and peaceful protests, the military still can act with impunity.
'People talk about President Thein Sein being reform-minded. That may be true. There's always been reform-minded people, even under the repressive system. But what we need in Burma is institutional changes, not changes based on personalities,' she said in Washington.
She said the litmus test of political reform would be 2015 national elections, when the military's control of parliament will be challenged. Even after winning 43 of the 45 seats contested in recent special elections, Suu Kyi's party still controls fewer than seven per cent of the seats, and refused to take them up when parliament convened on Monday due to a dispute over a single word in the oath of office, a sign of the formidable hurdles that remain in political reconciliation.
Western governments maintain it is important to act now to reward the Thein Sein government, to weaken the hand of conservatives in the military who oppose the democratic reforms.
The EU on Monday announced it was suspending most of its sanctions, except an arms embargo, for six months to a year while it assesses the country's progress.

 
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