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Protesters rally outside the Voice of America headquarters building before the arrival of Burma President Thein Sein during his visit to Washington on May 19, 2013. (Photo: Reuters / Yuri Gripas)
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Protesters rally outside the Voice of America headquarters building before the arrival of Burma President Thein Sein during his visit to Washington on May 19, 2013. (Photo: Reuters / Yuri Gripas)

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama will walk a fine line between fostering a US ally in China’s backyard and trying to defend human rights when the president of Burma becomes the first head of his country to visit the White House in 47 years on Monday.

Rights groups and some US lawmakers fear Obama has moved too quickly since forging a dramatic breakthrough in relations in 2011 after half a century of military rule in Burma.

US officials argue that reforms by President Thein Sein’s quasi-military government—freeing democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi and hundreds of political prisoners, scrapping censorship, legalizing trade unions and protests—are transformative and deserve support from Obama, who confirmed the end of Burma’s pariah status with the West with a landmark visit last November.

However, ethnic or sectarian violence, particularly in western Arakan State, has worsened since Washington started easing sanctions, and a Reuters special report published last week found apartheid-like policies segregating minority Muslims in prison-like ghettos there.

At least 192 people died last year in violence between ethnic Buddhists in Arakan State and Rohingya Muslims, who are denied citizenship by Burma. Most of the victims, and the 140,000 people made homeless in the attacks, were Muslims.

The Burma government’s rights record has long been poor, especially in resource-rich areas inhabited by ethnic Shans, Karens and Kachins.

The Washington-based US Campaign for Burma says 1,100 ethnic Rohingya and 200-250 Kachin have become political detainees in the past year, and the situation has led some to question how far Washington should go in its policy shift.

“When they abuse ethnic minorities, it really undercuts their credibility and undermines our ability to work with them,†said Republican Representive Trent Franks, one of a group of US lawmakers arguing for lifting US sanctions more slowly.

Obama administration officials believe that to deepen and sustain the reforms, Thein Sein has to be able to demonstrate tangible benefits to overcome opposition from powerful military leaders. To back that, Washington has narrowed the scope of its ban on business dealings with Burma officials and businessmen.

“Yes, there is still more work to do but … the progress they have made has been significant and they have put in place an ambitious reform agenda and we encourage them to keep doing more,†State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters on Friday, after Burma freed 23 political prisoners.

On Monday, the two countries are expected to announce plans to work out a Trade and Investment Framework Agreement that would lead to regular talks on boosting trade, labor standards and investment, a business leader familiar with the issue said.

Even critics in Congress of Obama’s Burma policy support the US strategic goal of bringing Burma, a nation of 60 million people tucked between China and India, out of its isolation from the West.

The long US-Burma estrangement was a drag on America’s relations with Asean, the 10 nation Southeast Asian regional grouping that looks to Washington as a counterbalance to the more assertive China of recent years.

Ernest Bower, senior adviser for Southeast Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said improving relations with Burma fits into the wider US policy of revitalizing its Asia-Pacific relationships.

“Myanmar is the keystone state that links China, Southeast Asia and India, and if we didn’t get it right, we wouldn’t be able to play the chess game that is required in order to deal with China,†he said.

But the concerns about rights abuses are holding back a fuller US embrace of Thein Sein, a retired general, who was taken off the US Treasury Department’s Specially Designated Nationals visa blacklist last year to facilitate engagement.

Thein Sein was a close confidante of former military ruler Than Shwe, who ran Burma for 19 years, a period that saw mass jailing of opponents, the gunning down of pro-democracy protesters and widespread abuses in ethnic minority areas.

Jennifer Quigley, head of the US Campaign for Burma, said that even without the killings in Arakan State, the Burma military’s heavy hand in forced land seizures and corrupt trade in natural resources in Kachin and other states in multi-ethnic Burma should give Western countries pause.

Burma’s most coveted resources—natural gas, minerals, gems and timber—lie in ethnic areas that have been war zones for decades and remain largely untouched by reforms, she said.

“Our biggest concern about welcoming Thein Sein to the White House is that it reinforces this positive impression of him and of what is going on in Burma, while we have serious misgivings that he is not interested in pursuing critical reforms,†said Quigley.

The military has run Burma since a 1962 coup by Ne Win, whose 1966 visit to Washington at the invitation of President Lyndon Johnson was the last such visit by the country’s head of state.

The European Union has moved faster than the United States on Burma, lifting its last sanctions on trade, the economy and individuals last month, although it retains an arms embargo.

Earlier this month, Obama scrapped a ban on US entry visas to Burma’s military rulers and their associates but kept sanctions on investing or doing business with figures involved in repression since the mid-1990s.

Franks and Democratic US congressman Rush Holt are using budget legislation to press the Obama administration to hold back on expanding nascent US military ties with Burma’s armed forces until the country stops abuses of ethnic groups and enacts reforms to reduce the military’s huge role in the economy.

“The Burmese military is the historic perpetrator of human rights abuses, and, one may presume, also the current perpetrator, so sanctions against them should be the last to go,†said Holt.

Additonal reporting by Arshad Mohammed.



Source: Irrawaddy.org

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