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US's Kerry presses Myanmar leaders on human rights, reforms

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry gives a speech during the 7th Lower Mekong Initiative ministerial meeting at the Myanmar International Convention Centre (MICC) in Naypyitaw, August 9, 2014. (Photo: REUTERS/ Soe Zeya Tun)


By Lesley Wroughton

Reuters

August 9, 2014


NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar: U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Saturday pressed Myanmar's political leaders on Washington's human rights concerns and urged its President Thein Sein to step up constitutional reforms to ensure elections next year are fully credible.


Kerry, in Myanmar's capital for the ASEAN Regional Forum, met Thein Sein and discussed plans for elections in 2015, concerns over the treatment of the minority Muslim Rohingya, as well as the jailing of journalists, a senior State Department official said.


He also discussed these issues with Shwe Mann, the speaker of parliament and leader of the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP).


While officials acknowledged there had been significant change in Myanmar during its political transition since 2011 from military rule, they also said there had been "some resistance and some slowdown" in tackling more difficult issues such as press freedom and constitutional reforms.


Kerry will meet with Myanmar opposition leader and international icon Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon on Sunday.


She has campaigned for a change to the constitution that bars her from the presidency and gives substantial political power to unelected military members of parliament.


The United States has promised to ease sanctions further if there are more reforms, including the withdrawal of the military from politics.


But U.S. officials said the lifting of remaining sanctions was unlikely until the process of reform and respect for human rights advances.


"Right now the focus is entirely on bearing down on these more fundamental challenges that they are now coming face to face with," the senior official said.


ROHINGYA IN SPOTLIGHT


Kerry got into "quite a few details" about the situation in Rakhine state and the minority Muslim Rohingya community, the official said.


In particular, he addressed the designation of the term "Bengali" which the Rohingya see as underscoring an assertion they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, even though many have lived in western Myanmar for generations.


"The name issue should be set aside," the official said.


"To force any community to accept a name they consider to be offensive is to invite conflict, and if the goal is to prevent conflict, then it's better to set that aside."


Kerry also raised specific cases involving the arrest of journalists, the official added.


The senior State Department official said there was no resistance from Thein to discussing the issues.


Ye Htut, Myanmar's minister of information, said on Friday the government had moved in the right direction since elections in 2011 but also recognized it needed to do more.


"We don't deny there are some challenges that we are facing," he said, "But we are moving toward the right direction and we're trying our best to overcome these challenges."


"People in Congress should have more understanding of our situation, and instead of blaming us, they try to find a way to help the Myanmar people to solve all these things," he said. 


(Additional reporting by Paul Mooney; Editing by Sophie Hares)

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