Thailand Seeks Aung San Suu Kyi 's Release
Thailand Seeks Aung San Suu Kyi 's Release
BANGKOK, Thailand -- Thailand will push Burma "as hard as we can" to free Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest, while also opening a new bridge across a river to link the two Southeast Asian nations.
"We would
like to see the release of Aung San Suu Kyi. That's clear,"
Thai Foreign Minister Kantathi Suphamongkhon said.
"We want to see her released, as immediately as
possible. We will press hard, as hard as we can, for that,"
Kantathi said.
Thailand's lucrative commercial
relations with Burma, also known as Myanmar, have attracted
complaints from Mrs. Suu Kyi's supporters that Bangkok's
elected politicians are too cozy with Rangoon's ruling
generals.
"I have to share with you another secret:
Myanmar has sometimes kept me from sleeping -- not full
nights -- but partial. Of course, that [Suu Kyi's house
arrest] is a very sensitive issue for Thailand," Kantathi
told the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand on
Thursday [Jan. 19].
"We would like Myanmar to accept
the foreign minister of Malaysia, Syed Hamid Albar...as soon
as possible."
Kantathi was referring to frustrated
attempts by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) to send Syed as a representative to Burma, to meet
the regime's coup-installed generals and Mrs. Suu Kyi, and
pressure Burma into freeing her.
"We heard that the
trip has been postponed because Myanmar had to focus
attention this month on the movement of the capital, but
nevertheless we have emphasized, and we will of course
emphasize," that ASEAN's representative should be allowed to
visit Burma "very soon," he said.
"If not January,
then February or March. That's the timetable we have."
Burma is currently shifting its capital from Rangoon
to the central city of Pyinmana.
The secretive generals
have kept the move to Pyinmana under tight security,
sparking speculation that they were following astrological
warnings, or feared an invasion by U.S. forces.
Burma's Information Minister Kyaw Hsan said however
the move was to improve governing the country, which has
suffered 50 years of guerrilla wars by various minority
ethnic tribes --- including the Shan, Chin and Karen -- who
want autonomy or independence for their far-flung,
jungle-clad regions.
"It [Pyinmana] is centrally
located, and has quick access to all parts of the country,"
Kyaw Hsan told reporters in November.
Impoverished,
chaotic Rangoon became a security nightmare for the generals
in 1988 when they killed more than 1,000 people while
crushing anti-government demonstrations.
By shifting
the main ministries and other government offices to newly
fortified, isolated Pyinmana, the regime might feel safer
from a possible future uprising.
Foreign embassies in
Rangoon were perplexed by the move, but were not expected to
immediately rebase in Pyinmana.
"If you need to
communicate on urgent matters, you can send a fax to
Pyinmana," Burma's foreign ministry told stunned ambassadors
in November.
That same month, the regime extended
Mrs. Suu Kyi's detention by another 12 months.
Sixty-year-old Mrs. Suu Kyi won the Nobel Peace Prize in
1991. She has been under house arrest, on and off, for 10 of
the past 15 years in her gloomy Rangoon villa.
Her
National League for Democracy party won a landslide election
victory in 1990, but the results were ignored by the
military.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
said in November Burma was "one of the worst regimes in the
world" because of relentless violations of human rights.
Washington and the European Union enforce some
economic sanctions against Burma in an effort to pressure
the regime into freeing Mrs. Suu Kyi and allowing democracy.
Burma stays solvent thanks to friendly economic
relations with its immediate neighbors, including China,
India, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore.
"This
weekend, we are opening a bridge," linking northwest
Thailand and northeast Burma across the narrow Salween
River, Kantathi said.
"The bridge will facilitate
communication between our peoples."
Thailand and Burma
already share a modest overland crossing, plus daily flights
linking Bangkok and Chiang Mai with Rangoon and Mandalay.
"We share 2,400 kilometers of border with them,"
Kantathi said.
"I always tell them to look at Thailand.
We are a mature democracy, and look at what we have done."
Richard S. Ehrlich, a freelance journalist who has reported
news from Asia for the past 27 years, is co-author of the
non-fiction book, "HELLO MY BIG BIG HONEY!" -- Love Letters
to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews. His web
page is
http://www.geocities.com/asia_correspondent