The Myanmar official speaking from the capital, Naypyitaw, said Thursday that security for a visit on Nov. 18 or 19 had been prepared, but that the schedule was not final. He asked not to be named because he was not authorized to give information to the media.
The official said Obama would meet with opposition leader Aung San
Suu Kyi as well as government officials including reformist President
Thein Sein.
It would be the first-ever visit to Myanmar by an
American president. U.S. officials have not yet announced any plans for a
visit, which would come less than two weeks after Obama’s election to a
second term.
Obama’s administration has sought to encourage the
recent democratic progress under Thein Sein by easing sanctions applied
against Myanmar’s previous military regime.
Officials in nearby
Thailand and Cambodia have already informally announced plans for visits
by Obama that same week. Cambodia is hosting a summit meeting of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations, and Thailand is a longtime close
U.S. ally.
The visit to Myanmar, also known as Burma, would be
the culmination of a dramatic turnaround in relations with Washington as
the country has shifted from five decades of ruinous military rule and
shaken off the pariah status it had earned through its bloody
suppression of democracy.
Obama’s ending of the long-standing U.S.
isolation of Myanmar’s generals has played a part in coaxing them into
political reforms that have unfolded with surprising speed in the past
year. The U.S. has appointed a full ambassador and suspended sanctions
to reward Myanmar for political prisoner releases and the election of
Nobel laureate Suu Kyi to parliament.
From Myanmar’s point of
view, the lifting of sanctions is essential for boosting a lagging
economy that was hurt not only by sanctions that curbed exports and
foreign investment, but also by what had been a protectionist,
centralized approach. Thein Sein’s government has initiated major
economic reforms in addition to political ones.
A procession of
senior diplomats and world leaders have traveled to Myanmar, stopping
both in the remote, opulent capital city, which was built by the former
ruling junta, and at Suu Kyi’s dilapidated lakeside villa in the main
city of Yangon, where she spent 15 years under house arrest. New Zealand
announced Thursday that Prime Minister John Key would visit Myanmar
after attending the regional meetings in Cambodia.
The most senior
U.S. official to visit was Hillary Rodham Clinton, who last December
became the first U.S. secretary of state to travel to Myanmar in 56
years.
The Obama administration regards the political changes in
Myanmar as a marquee achievement in its foreign policy, and one that
could dilute the influence of China in a country that has a strategic
location between South and Southeast Asia, regions of growing economic
importance.
But exiled Myanmar activists and human rights groups
are likely to criticize an Obama visit as premature, rewarding Thein
Sein before his political and economic reforms have truly taken root.
The military — still dominant and implicated in rights abuses — has
failed to prevent vicious outbreaks of communal violence in the west of
the country that have left scores dead.
No comments:
Post a Comment