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Suu Kyi says cannot back Myanmar’s Rohingya

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Aung San Suu Kyi on Thursday described violence in west Myanmar between Buddhists and Muslims as a “huge international tragedy” and said illegal immigration from Bangladesh had to be stopped

Suu Kyi says Myanmar unrest an 'international tragedy' - The China Post


The question is: Are those Rohingyas illegal immigrants or are they from the land? Is Suu Kyi trying to change the meaning of the word immigrant? Anyway her position is very clear and let see if the west is going to back their favorite daughter.
 
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Aung San Suu Kyi on Thursday described violence in west Myanmar between Buddhists and Muslims as a “huge international tragedy” and said illegal immigration from Bangladesh had to be stopped

Suu Kyi says Myanmar unrest an 'international tragedy' - The China Post


The question is: Are those Rohingyas illegal immigrants or are they from the land? Is Suu Kyi trying to change the meaning of the word immigrant? Anyway her position is very clear and let see if the west is going to back their favorite daughter.

It is political suicide for her so say anything else. She has tried to stay out of the debate for as long as possible but she cannot wait any longer. Anyway, I don't think the West will allow this situation to get in the way of the big $$$ they see in Myanmar.
 
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(Reuters) - Aung Thaw was a teenager when he joined Myanmar's armed forces, which seized power in 1962 and led a promising Asian nation into half a century of poverty, isolation and fear.

Now 59, he has a new mission as deputy minister of defense: explaining why the military intends to retain a dominant role in a fragile new era of democratic reform.

In a two-hour interview with Reuters, the first by a leader of the armed forces with the international media since Myanmar's historic reforms began last year, Aung Thaw depicted the military as both architect and guardian of his country's embryonic democracy.

That's why the military has no plans to give up its presence in parliament, he said, where its unelected delegates occupy a quarter of the seats. Nor will the military apologize for its violent suppressions of pro-democracy protests in 1988 and 2007 that led to crippling Western sanctions.

"The government is leading the democratization," said Aung Thaw. "The Defense Services are pro-actively participating in the process."

The military will also retain a leading role in Myanmar's economy through its holding companies, according to the firms, which are among the country's biggest commercial enterprises.

Aung Thaw's comments came ahead of Barack Obama's visit to Myanmar on November 19 - the first by a serving U.S. president to the country also known as Burma.

The generals' reluctance to loosen their grip on power and acknowledge past abuses raises fundamental questions for this strategic country at Asia's crossroads: Can Myanmar be reborn after decades of dictatorship without the military itself also undergoing profound change? And is the United States too quickly embracing the generals?

full story: Special Report: Myanmar military's next campaign: shoring up power | Reuters


Myanmar is indeed on a cross road and many bad elements begin to surface. Too fast too soon?

With many NGOs follow Obama into the country and if the generals don't handle the situations well, I'm afraid blood will flow on the streets.
 
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US worries on Cambodia rights before Obama trip


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WASHINGTON: The United States said on Thursday it was pressing Cambodian leader Hun Sen to reverse his "very worrying" direction on human rights as President Barack Obama prepared to visit for a regional summit.

Obama will on Monday become the first sitting US president to visit Cambodia, where human rights groups accuse the government of stepping up a crackdown on dissidents and on protests, many linked to land disputes.

Samantha Power, a White House official in charge of human rights, told reporters on a conference call that Obama was visiting for the "important" East Asia Summit and related meetings hosted by Hun Sen.

"But our message to him on a bilateral basis is very much about human rights abuses that are being committed within Cambodia's borders and urging him once and for all to actually start to take these concerns seriously rather than continuing to move in very worrying directions," she said.

Power said that the main US message to Hun Sen will be to hold free and fair elections, to end land seizures and to protect human rights more broadly.

A dozen US senators and members of the House of Representatives last month urged Obama to speak out over Cambodia's "deteriorating human rights situation."

Phil Robertson, the deputy Asia director of Human Rights Watch, earlier said that if Obama does not speak out over concerns, "his visit will be seen by the government as an endorsement and deepen the sense of inviolability."

US worries on Cambodia rights before Obama trip - Channel NewsAsia


Let's hope the Rohingya issue can draw international assistance.
 
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It's politically too risky for her under the current circumstances. She's a politician.

Don't forget, Abdur Razak was a member of General Aung's cabinet right before their assassination.

Look, Abdur Razak is not Rohingya.
 
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