| Amid Pressure,
Suu Kyi's Operation May be Way Out for Junta
Larry Jagan
September 24, 2003:
Mizzima News (www.mizzima.com)
BANGKOK, Sep 24 (IPS) - International
efforts are once again being stepped
up to secure the release of Burma's pro-democracy leader Aung
San Suu Kyi,
with Indonesia's special envoy Ali Alatas seeing her in Rangoon
and U.N. envoy on Burma Razali Ismail due to go there in a
few days.
Alatas, former foreign minister of Indonesia, conveyed to
Burma's top generals the concerns of the Association of South-east
Asian Nations (ASEAN), the region's main diplomatic grouping,
about Suu Kyi's continued detention.
Indonesia is the ASEAN chair this year and host to the 9th
leaders' summit on Oct.7-8 in Bali island, where the Burma
issue is certain to come up.
Meantime, U.N. envoy Razali Ismail is to visit Rangoon on
Sep. 30 and will be trying once again to get the stalled dialogue
process restarted.
After handing over a letter of concern about Suu Kyi to Burmese
officials and meeting with top leader Gen Than Shwe, and Prime
Minister Gen. Khin Nyunt, Alatas told reporters in Rangoon
that he was assured by both leaders that ''they appreciate
the content of the letter and they would carefully consider
the views and suggestions''.
Alatas did not meet the opposition leader because of her
recent gynaecological surgery, but remains confident that
Burma's military rulers do not intend to keep Suu Kyi in detention
indefinitely. He was not, however, given any time frame for
her release.
The detention of Aung San Suu Kyi is ''becoming increasingly
counterproductive,” Alatas was quoted as saying on Wednesday.
The visits by Alatas and Razali come at a time when ironically,
Suu Kyi's major operation in a private hospital in Rangoon
may well provide the generals with a way out of their predicament
-- how to release her without appearing to give in to external,
especially western, pressure.
”The operation went well and the patient is back to
normal - physically, mentally and spiritually,” said
Aung San Suu Kyi's physician Dr Tin Myo Win, who attended
the operation.
The opposition leader is still recuperating in the hospital,
but is expected to be discharged soon after the final stitches
are removed.
She has been incommunicado for nearly four months now, after
she was taken
in under 'protective custody' following an attack by vigilantes
suspected to be with the Rangoon military government.
Earlier in September, Red Cross representatives were allowed
to see her and were able to dispel fears that she was on hunger
strike.
But the fact that Suu Kyi's medical operation appears to
have been successful will not lessen international pressure
on Rangoon to release her immediately and unconditionally.
Diplomats in Rangoon believe the military regime will return
the opposition leader to her residence when she is discharged
from hospital and placed under house arrest. ”The military
authorities have a good humanitarian reason to move her home
now,” said a Rangoon-based Asian ambassador.
The operation has certainly given the generals an opportunity
to take a major face-saving measure that could help reduce
pressure from their Asian neighbours at least - especially
at the ASEAN summit in Bali.
South-east Asian leaders are hoping to find a way of preventing
the issue of
Aung San Suu Kyi's release and Burma's failure to introduce
political reform from dominating the summit.
”We are expecting a significant gesture from the regime
in the next two weeks leading up to the summit,” a senior
Bangkok-based diplomat who regularly deals with Rangoon told
IPS. ”Placing her under house arrest and resuming the
constitutional process would reduce the ASEAN pressure on
Yangon (Rangoon), at least in the next few months.”
”It is in the interest of ASEAN and (Burma) that no
extraneous issue such as
the problem of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi would mar the deliberations
of ASEAN,” as Alatas himself said.
By moving Suu Kyi home, after Alatas' visit to Rangoon, the
generals would also give ASEAN some credit for quiet diplomacy
and avoid its move being linked to U.S. pressure or Razali's
visit to Rangoon.
But apart from seeing Suu Kyi released, foreign governments
-- even ASEAN --
will want to see some progress in the reconciliation process
in the nearfuture.
The new prime minister, Gen Khin Nyunt, will have to prove
the government's
sincerity about introducing political and economic reform
in the near future.
”General Khin Nyunt needs time to be able to press
ahead with his plans for
change,” said a Rangoon-based Asian diplomat. ”He
needs a honeymoon period,
free of overt pressure say three months or a hundred days.”
He has announced a seven-point road map to democracy that
would involve drawing up a new constitution and holding new
elections. The government set up a National Convention --
comprising more than 700 handpicked representatives -- to
draw up a new constitution more than 10 years ago.
The convention has not met since 1996 after Aung San Suu
Kyi's party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), walked
out and accused the military
authorities of not allowing a free debate or discussion and
simply using it to rubberstamp decisions already made by the
generals.
Now it seems the government is preparing to reconvene the
National Convention. A new steering committee has been named,
partly because some of
the previous members had passed away, and assigned tasks.
Apart from several members who are attorneys or have a strong
legal background, many of the members are from military intelligence
and close to Khin Nyunt.
While they are likely to support the military intelligence
chief's views and
accommodate Suu Kyi and her party, there remains evidence
that Rangoon is
prepaying to bypass her anyway.
In the past few weeks, the regime has been organising pro-government
rallies
supporting Khin Nyunt's road map to democracy. The United
Solidarity Development Association, a civilian organisation
that the military uses to mobilise support for government
policy, has been arranging these meetings.
In the past there was definitely a division within the military
top brass over how to deal with Aung San Suu Kyi, with the
intelligence chief favouring working with her. In recent weeks
though, there have been signs that these differences have
disappeared.
”Khin Nyunt is pressing on with his plans and has decided
he cannot deal with the lady,” said a source in Rangoon
close to the intelligence chief.
|