A new US envoy to Myanmar ended his first visit to the country yesterday by urging “genuine and concrete” reforms by the army-backed regime and said Washington would respond “in kind.”
Derek Mitchell, who was appointed as the first US coordinator for policy on Myanmar last month, said the Southeast Asian nation should begin by releasing political prisoners, ending ethnic conflicts and reaching out to critics.
Mitchell urged Myanmar to “prove the skeptics wrong,” as he prepared to leave the country after a visit that included talks with ministers of the new nominally-civilian government and opposition icon Aung San Suu Kyi.
Photo: EPA
“I noted that progress on these issues will be essential to progress in the bilateral relationship and that if the government takes genuine and concrete action, the United States will respond in kind,” he told reporters at Yangon airport.
Mitchell, who was on his first official visit to the country as part of Washington’s strategy of engagement, did not directly mention the wide-ranging sanctions imposed against Myanmar by the US. However, he said he had discussed US “policy approaches” with Aung San Suu Kyi and her party.
Mitchell called for the release of the approximately 2,000 political detainees and voiced fears over “serious human rights violations, including against women and children” linked to hostilities in ethnic minority areas. The envoy also said the US was concerned about the “lack of transparency” in Myanmar’s military dealings with North Korea.
US diplomatic memos released last year by WikiLeaks said Washington has suspected for years that Myanmar ran a secret nuclear program supported by Pyongyang. In May, a US Navy destroyer intercepted a North Korean cargo ship in the South China Sea suspected of carrying missiles or other weapons that may have been destined for Myanmar and made it turn back.
Mitchell’s post was created in 2008 when the US Congress, under then-US president George W. Bush, approved a law that tightened sanctions against Myanmar, but the position was not filled at the time because of a political dispute.
After taking power in 2009, US President Barack Obama’s administration changed tack, concluding the measures aimed at isolating Myanmar had been ineffective.
Myanmar’s government has recently appeared to be seeking to improve its image by reaching out to critics such as Aung San Suu Kyi, who last month met Burmese President Thein Sein for the first time.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner was released from seven straight years of house arrest by the junta in November last year.
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