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RESOLUTION 1325
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Burma: Global, Asean Intervention
Needed on Suu Kyi Case: AIPMC
August 27, 2008 – (The Irrawaddy) Influential
international and regional leaders should act immediately to help
detained Burmese democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi get her message
out to the world, according to a leading rights group.
Speaking with The Irrawaddy on Wednesday, Roshan Jason, executive
director and spokesperson for Asean Inter-Parliamentary Myanmar
Caucus (AIPMC), said, “We don’t know what Suu Kyi’s
intentions are. She could be refusing food for many reasons. It
may be a protest. But, if there is a problem, we cannot find out.
United Nations special envoy to Burma Ibrahim Gambari, left, is
greeted by Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono prior to
their meeting in Jakarta on Wednesday.
"Suu Kyi is not a criminal. We must at least allow her to have
a voice. She cannot be cut off from the world.
"We are calling for international intervention from Asean’s
secretary-general and the UN secretary-general to get involved,”
he added. “The very least they should do is check her status—is
she really on hunger strike?”
In a statement released on Wednesday, AIPMC urged UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-Moon, as well as Surin Pitsuwan, the general-secretary of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) to pay visits
to Burma and meet with Suu Kyi as soon as possible.
The statement said that Suu Kyi’s refusal to receive UN Special
Envoy Ibrahim Gambari during his visit to Burma last week was a
sign that his mandate is failing.
A comprehensive assessment of Suu Kyi’s health must be carried
out as soon as possible, the statement concluded, adding that the
secretary-general of Asean should also look into the reasons as
to why she may be refusing her food supplies.
Suu Kyi, who has spent more than 13 of the past 19 years under house
arrest, has reportedly refused to accept food supplies since August
15. Some observers have suggested she is on hunger strike.
The AIPMC also reminded the UN and Asean that the continued well-being
of Suu Kyi is vital to achieving a peaceful resolution to the conflict
in Burma.
Meanwhile, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who met
with Ibrahim Gambari on Wednesday, said that the UN envoy’s
mission to Burma had not failed yet, and that the "Group of
Friends on Myanmar” still supported his role.
From:http://www.irrawaddy.org/article1.php?art_id=14060
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