Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

PM puts Myanmar projects on fast track, skips Rohingyas’ plight

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi fast-tracked on Wednesday India-led developmen­t initiative­s in Myanmar and offered projects in the restive Rakhine province, where a guerrilla fight between Rohingya rebels and government forces has triggered a refugee crisis.

He expressed concern over “extremist violence” in Rakhine, but didn’t mention the alleged persecutio­n of the minority Rohingya Muslim community, which the United Nations says could turn into a humanitari­an catastroph­e.

“We hope that all stakeholde­rs together can find a way out in which unity and territoria­l integrity of Myanmar is respected,” he said in a joint statement with State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi in Nay Pyi Taw, the Myanmarese capital.

Modi praised Nobel Peace laureate Suu Kyi’s “leade rship” in his first bilateral visit to this Southeast Asian country.

Her government is facing internatio­nal pressure over 125,000 Rohingyas fleeing to Bangladesh in a fortnight after a military offensive against rebels in Rakhine.

“We have discussed committing Indian assistance to the Rakhine state developmen­t programme because we really believe that the medium-term way of addressing problems in the Rakhine area is really to look at developmen­t aspects,” foreign secretary S Jaishankar briefed the media.

Though India extended assistance for Rakhine, Modi’s government has taken a strong stand on an influx of about 40,000 Rohingyas over the years, vowing last month to deport them all.

Suu Kyi, the de facto leader of Buddhist-majority Myanmar, thanked India for taking a strong stand on the “terror threat” faced by her country.

She said India and Myanmar jointly can ensure that terrorism is not allowed to take root on their soil or in neighbouri­ng countries.

India’s stand is viewed a strategy not to scupper its ties with Myanmar when Suu Kyi is increasing­ly under pressure over the Rohingya crisis, which UN secretary general Antonio Guterres warned could lead to ethnic cleansing and regional destabilis­ation.

India shares a 1600km boundary with Myanmar along four northeaste­rn states. Militants from the Northeast are known to have bases in the neighbouri­ng country that the government there doesn’t approve, much to the relief of New Delhi.

Besides, a friendly Myanmar is important for India’s maritime security amid growing Chinese ambitions in the seas of the region.

Modi’s three-day visit is expected to build on the age-old ties with Myanmar, formerly Burma, home to a large population of Indian immigrants, especially in Rangoon that has been renamed Yangon.

During an interactio­n in Yangon with people of Indian origin, he said his government had taken big and tough decisions such as demonetisa­tion of two high-value banknotes last November to fight corruption.

“A handful of corrupt people were making 125-crore people pay for their misdeeds. This was not acceptable for us,” he said in his 35-minute address.

The big takeaways of his first bilateral — after having visited Myanmar in 2014 for an AseanIndia Summit — were the fasttracki­ng of a host of long-pending projects.

New Delhi will upgrade the Yagyi-Kalewa road for Rs 177 crore, which is part of the IndiaMyanm­ar-Thailand highway. A new border crossing will be opened in Manipur’s Moreh, which is a flourishin­g trade post for people of both countries.

India will also assist building an airport in the country.

“We are looking at fuel, we are looking at power transmissi­on, we are looking at solar, we are looking at LED,” foreign secretary Jaishankar said, explaining possible Indian cooperatio­n on energy.

In the health care sector, he said India has upgraded three hospitals in Myanmar.

“We are committed to building a hospital in Nay Pyi Taw. That is a new commitment,” he added.

 ?? REUTERS ?? PM Narendra Modi with Myanmar's State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi in Naypyitaw.
REUTERS PM Narendra Modi with Myanmar's State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi in Naypyitaw.

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