| Dialogue Process
Adrift after Failed Visit by U.N. Envoy
Larry Jagan (IPS)
RANGOON, October 3, 2003:
Mizzima News (www.mizzima.com):
U.N. envoy Razali Ismail's latest mission to Burma has ended
in apparent failure, leaving him emptyhanded in efforts to
revive the dialogue between Burma's military rulers and the
pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi - not to mention secure
her release from house arrest.
Throughout out his two-day visit to Burma, Razali was tight-lipped.
"I met all the key people I came to see and as the U.N.
representative had useful discussions with them," was
all he would say as he left the country Thursday.
The lack of apparent progress means that Burma is likely
to take centre stage at the South-east Asian leaders' summit
in Bali next week. The member countries of the Association
of South-east Asian Nations (ASEAN) were hoping to see some
kind of sign that Rangoon is planning to introduce significant
political and economic change.
Without any concessions from Burma's military rulers from
Razali's visit, there will be even greater pressure on Prime
Minister Khin Nyunt to give his South-east Asian counterparts
concrete details and a timeframe for the changes he has in
mind as part of a road map to democracy for Burma.
Khin Nyunt is reported to have appealed to Razali to give
him more time to be able to prepare for political change.
"We need some time," said Burma's Foreign Minister
Khin Maung Win. "The government has announced its seven-stage
road map and is working on already -- it is the blueprint
for the country."
''Our position has always been that the process (of democratisation)
must be
homegrown,'' he said, adding that Rangoon had all intentions
with cooperating with the United Nations.
Still, "there is no doubt that Mr Razali has gone away
empty-handed," said a diplomat in Rangoon. "His
reticence to comment on the outcome of his mission clearly
reflects that."
During his trip Razali did see the country's top three generals
- Senior Gen Than Shwe, Prime Minister Gen Khin Nyunt and
the army chief, Gen Maung Aye.
He had intended to see Aung San Suu Kyi a second time before
leaving, but decided against it because there appeared to
be no message from the generals
to convey to her.
But according to Razali, the opposition leader said she was
prepared to work with the new prime minister and his road
map to democracy -- though there
would be conditions to that participation.
Among these conditions is that all the other leaders of her
party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), would have
to be freed.
They have been under house arrest for more than four months
now ever since
the violent attack on Suu Kyi's car and supporters by armed
pro-government
protestors in the north of the country on May 30, which left
several people dead.
Other conditions include the reopening of the NLD's office
and party workers being allowed to resume their normal political
activities without being harassed or arrested by the authorities.
Suu Kyi has also demanded the release of all political prisoners,
with the 30-odd activists detained in the wake of the Depayin
incident in May freed immediately.
She is also demanding justice for the victims of the attack
and a thorough investigation into what happened, and who was
involved.
But diplomats believe that while the opposition leader is
adamant that the incident cannot be brushed aside or forgotten,
she is prepared not to allow it to stand in the way of serious
political talks -- if they are in fact in the offing.
Diplomats interviewed here said that the lack of movement
on the dialogue with Suu Kyi seems to indicate that Rangoon's
military leaders have not quite agreed on how to handle the
issue.
However, Khin Nyunt has indicated that he intends to reconvene
the National
Convention, which was established more than 10 years ago to
draw up a new
constitution.
But it has not met since 1996 after the NLD walked out, accusing
the military authorities of not allowing a free debate or
discussion and simply using it to rubberstamp decisions already
made by the generals.
Still, the convening committee has been reformed and new
members appointed,
largely because several older members have retired or passed
away. Apart from those who are there because of their legal
training or position, many of the new members are from military
intelligence and believed to share Khin Nyunt's vision of
change.
"The ethnic minorities have been contacted and told
to prepare for the convention's opening," said a ethnic
leader in Rangoon who declined to be identified. "Some
of them have even been told to have new suits made,"
he said.
Razali discussed the issue of the structure and composition
of the National Convention with Khin Nyunt during his visit.
"I made some suggestions and observations," he said
after his meeting with Khin Nyunt, but declined to elaborate.
"The U.N. envoy suggested that the prime minister consider
reforming the Convention on the basis of forty percent being
for the political parties on the basis of the 1990 election
results, thirty percent the ethnic minorities -- split equally
between those who have signed ceasefire agreements and the
others, with the remaining thirty percent being military or
government representatives," said a senior diplomat in
Rangoon.
But neither Khin Nyunt nor his boss Gen Than Shwe seem to
have reacted to
Razali's suggestions.
"The government still needs to decide who will be attending
the National Convention," said the Deputy Foreign Minister
Maung Win. "But we are preparing for its opening -- the
technical and logistics considerations are being dealt with,"
he said. "Accommodation has been booked and the transport
arrangements -- trains and buses have been booked.''
The crucial issue for the region and the international community
is whether Burma's generals -- especially Khin Nyunt and Than
Shwe -- are prepared to
give Aung San Suu Kyi and her NLD a central role in the reconvened
National
Convention and the national reconciliation process.
The NLD has consistently said it would not return to the
Convention unless
it is radically reformed and restructured.
"It was the NLD who walked out of the National Convention,
so it is up to them to return," said Maung Win.
(Inter Press Service) |