Wednesday, November 4, 2009
US ENVOY MEETS IRON LADY IN BURMA
Aung San Suu Kyi Appears With US Envoy
RANGOON (AFP) -- Detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi made a rare appearance in front of reporters at a Rangoon hotel Wednesday before holding talks with a visiting U.S. envoy.
Dressed in maroon traditional dress, the Nobel laureate smiled but said nothing as she headed into the meeting with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell.
The Nobel Laureate was driven to the hotel in central Rangoon from the lakeside mansion where she has spent most of the last two decades under house arrest.
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US envoys in historic meeting with Burma's PM
RANGOON (AFP) – The most senior US official to visit Burma for nearly a decade and a half met the military-led nation's prime minister Wednesday as Washington seeks to improve ties with the ruling junta.
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell, along with his deputy Scot Marciel, were also set to meet the detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi later in the day.
The US duo arrived in the remote administrative capital Naypyidaw on Tuesday on a two-day mission aimed at pushing a new policy of engagement by the administration of President Barack Obama.
"They are meeting now," a Burmese official told AFP on condition of anonymity after the talks with Prime Minister Thein Sein in Naypyidaw began early Wednesday.
Burma's officials said the US delegation was not expected to meet Senior General Than Shwe, the reclusive junta leader.
Campbell is the highest ranking US official to travel to Burma since Madeleine Albright went as US ambassador to the United Nations in 1995 during Bill Clinton's presidency.
The Obama administration recently shifted US policy because its longstanding approach of isolating Burma had failed to bear fruit. But Washington has said it will not ease sanctions without progress on democracy and human rights.
The visit by Campbell and Marciel is a follow-up to discussions in New York in September between US and the Burmese officials, the highest-level US contact with the regime in nearly a decade.
Campbell and Marciel at the time also raised US concerns about Burma's possible military links with nuclear-armed North Korea.
US State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said the current visit was a "fact-finding" mission, adding that it was the "first step, or I guess I should say the second step in the beginning of a dialogue with Burma."
Asked what Campbell discussed on Tuesday in talks with the information minister and local organisations, Kelly said: "They laid out the way we see this relationship going forward, how we should structure this dialogue, but they were mainly in a listening mode."
Campbell and Marciel were due to fly to the former capital Rangoon later Wednesday to meet Suu Kyi and members of her National League for Democracy party, a US embassy spokesman said.
Nobel Peace laureate Suu Kyi, 64, had her house arrest extended by another 18 months in August, prompting an international outcry. She has spent most of the past two decades in detention.
NLD spokesman Nyan Win has said the visit is the "start of direct engagement between the US and Myanmar government" but added that the party was not expecting any immediate "big change".
Suu Kyi will be discussed when Obama meets Southeast Asian leaders at a regional summit in Singapore in mid-November, Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said Tuesday, adding that Thein Sein was expected to attend.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) favours engagement but has been accused of going soft on Burma's generals.
The junta prolonged Suu Kyi's detention after she was convicted over an incident in which US national John Yettaw swam to her lakeside house. But critics say the charges were trumped up to keep her out of elections in 2010.
In August, leader Than Shwe held an unprecedented meeting with visiting US senator Jim Webb which yielded the release of Yettaw.
Thein Sein told Asian leaders at a summit in Thailand last month that the junta sees a role for Suu Kyi in fostering reconciliation ahead of the promised elections next year and could ease restrictions on her.
The junta refused to acknowledge the NLD's landslide win in the last elections, in 1990. The United States toughened sanctions after the regime cracked down on protests led by Buddhist monks in 2007.
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