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Burma: Offer to Release Suu Kyi
a Ploy?
July 22, 2008 - (IPS) Reacting to growing international
pressure Burma’s military regime has said it will consider
releasing the pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest
in six months.
That verbal assurance by Burmese foreign minister Nyan Win was made
Sunday, at the opening of the foreign ministers’ meeting of
the Association of South-east Asian Nations (ASEAN). It was confirmed
by Singapore foreign minister George Yeo, host of the 10-member
bloc’s 41st ministerial meeting being held in the city-state
this week.
But such a gesture of conciliation -- the first by a Burmese minister,
where a specific timetable for Suu Kyi’s freedom has been
spelled out -- has been received with more scepticism than praise.
For the military rulers in Burma, or Myanmar, have a notorious record
of sounding soft and appearing to compromise when they are under
political heat from regional governments and beyond.
Even Nyan Win’s attempt to give the amnesty announcement a
veneer of legal authenticity is being dismissed by former political
prisoners in Burma. He is reported to have said that Suu Kyi’s
current period under house arrest will reach its six-year limit
by the next six months.
"These statements are not based on sincerity. The military
regime wants to reduce the international pressure so it is using
the release of Daw Suu Kyi as a ploy,’’ says Bo Kyi,
a former Burmese political prisoner and a leading member of the
Assistance Association for Political Prisoners in Burma (AAPP),
a group that monitors and supports political prisoners. "They
have made similar promises before.’’
The legal limit to hold a political prisoner is five years, he added
during a telephone interview from Mae Sot, along the Thai-Burma
border. "If they are serious, they should release her now.
Why wait? The minister’s announcement is not based on the
law.’’
Suu Kyi, who leads the opposition National League for Democracy
(NLD) party, has spent more than 12 of the past 18 years under house
arrest in her dilapidated family home in Rangoon. The Nobel Peace
laureate began her current stretch in detention in May 2003.
ASEAN ministers were clearly in no mood to let this status quo prevail.
A strong statement released by the group noted its "deep disappointment’’
in the junta’s decision to extend Suu Kyi’s detention
for a sixth year in late May, and said that the junta should demonstrate
real measures to move the country "toward a peaceful transition
to democracy in the near future’’.
ASEAN’s members include Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, Indonesia,
Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
The group was formed in 1967 to stall the spread of communism and
promote free-market policies. Last November, its leaders signed
a rules-based charter aimed at strengthening unity and upholding
human rights.
The pressure generated by ASEAN on Burma has confirmed its willingness,
when faced by a serious threat to its credibility, to depart from
its long-held principle of not interfering with the internal affairs
of a fellow member. Signs of this shift have been evident since
Suu Kyi’s current spell under house arrest, with the harshest
rebuke before this week coming last year. It followed the junta’s
use of force to crackdown on thousands of monks, protesting peacefully
on the streets for greater political freedom last September.
ASEAN’s current statement, however, is grounded in another
area where the oppressive Burmese regime has been found wanting:
aiding the victims of the powerful Cyclone Nargis, which tore through
Burma’s Irrawaddy Delta in early May. The disaster killed
between 130,000 to 300,000 people and affected another 2.5 million
to four million people.
ASEAN stepped in to aid its beleaguered member as part of a relief,
rehabilitation and reconstruction effort that also involved the
United Nations. But progress has been slow, with the junta reluctant
to remove all the roadblocks to help the victims. Singapore’s
Yeo recently gave the ASEAN effort in post-cyclone Burma a "C’’
grade, according to local media reports.
And it cannot risk a further decline since ASEAN tried to convince
the international community that its involvement in the recovery
effort would ensure better results. For the Burmese regime, though,
it meant an easier way of attracting the millions of dollars in
aid.
But international donors are still not moved. "The international
community is still suspicious of the military regime. They are not
sure if the regime will be sincere in the rehabilitation phase,’’
says Soe Aung, spokesman for the National Council of the Union of
Burma, a network of Burmese political groups living in exile.
"ASEAN’s statement reflects this. It is a way of using
the situation to apply some pressure,’’ he explained
in an interview. "The military regime’s offer of freedom
for Suu Kyi is also due to this lack of funds. The regime is hoping
to gain some sympathy and money.’’
ASEAN is worried that the international donors will not come to
the table to help in the next phase of the post-cyclone effort,
says Debbie Stothard of ALTSEAN, a regional human rights lobby.
An ASEAN and U.N. report revealed Monday that Burma will need one
billion US dollars to rebuild the devastated parts of the country
over the next three years.
"ASEAN’s leaders are slowly understanding that they cannot
be made fools by the Burmese regime,’’ Stothard told
IPS. "Cyclone Nargis has provided an opening for the regional
leaders and the international community to engage with the regime
differently than before.’’
From:http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=43263
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