Bangkok Post

Suu Kyi denies going ‘soft’ on military

Leader fails to address ‘ethnic cleansing’ rap

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YANGON: Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi has rejected a suggestion she is soft on the military, which the United Nations has accused of ethnic cleansing, saying her relationsh­ip with the generals was normal and her objective was national reconcilia­tion.

Ms Suu Kyi condemned on Tuesday rights abuses in Rakhine State, where conflict that began last month has forced 421,000 Rohingya Muslims to seek refuge in Bangladesh, and said violators would be punished.

However, in her first address to the Buddhist-majority nation on the crisis, she did not address UN accusation­s of ethnic cleansing by the security forces, drawing cool internatio­nal responses.

“We’ve never changed our stand,” Ms Suu Kyi said in an interview with Radio Free Asia, when asked if she had softened her stance on the military, which she challenged for years in her campaign for democracy.

“Our goal has been national reconcilia­tion from the very beginning. We have never criticised the military itself, but only their actions. We may disagree on these types of actions.”

She cited her unsuccessf­ul bid in parliament to change a military-drafted constituti­on, which bars her from the presidency and gives the military responsibi­lity over security and a veto over charter reform.

“We’ll continue to bring changes within the parliament. I’ve stood firm with the military before, and still do now,” she told Radio Free Asia.

She again did not refer to the accusation­s that the military is engaged in ethnic cleansing.

Ms Suu Kyi, the daughter of Myanmar’s independen­ce leader who founded the army, has for years been feted in the West as a champion of democracy during years of military rule and house arrest.

But the Nobel Peace laureate has faced growing criticism for saying little about abuses faced by the Rohingya.

Rights monitors and fleeing Rohingya say the army and Rakhine Buddhist vigilantes have mounted a campaign of arson aimed at driving out the mostly stateless Muslim population.

The UN rights agency said it was “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing”.

Myanmar rejects the charge, saying its forces are tackling insurgents of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army who it has accused of setting the fires and attacking civilians.

Western diplomats and aid officials had been hoping she would issue an unequivoca­l condemnati­on of violence and hate speech in her first address on the Rakhine State conflict.

They welcomed the message, as far as it went, but some had been hoping for a stronger stand.

Suu Kyi condemned all rights violations and said she was committed to the restoratio­n of peace and the rule of law.

On the return of refugees, she said Myanmar was ready to start a verificati­on process under a 1993 arrangemen­t with Bangladesh and “refugees ... will be accepted without any problem”. She also said diplomats could visit the conflict zone.

In a phone call to Ms Suu Kyi, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson welcomed Myanmar’s commitment to allow the return of refugees, but urged it to facilitate aid to those affected by the violence and to address “deeply troubling” rights abuse allegation­s, the State Department said.

US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Patrick Murphy is in Myanmar this week. He will travel to Sittwe, the Rakhine capital to meet government officials and representa­tives of different communitie­s, but is not seeking to travel to the conflict zone. The UK said it had suspended its military training programme in Myanmar and French President Emmanuel Macron condemned “unacceptab­le ethnic cleaning”.

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