China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China’s solution to Rakhine crisis practical, constructi­ve

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Will finger-pointing and the threat of sanctions help solve the crisis in Myanmar’s Rakhine state? Definitely not. Casting accusation­s at a sovereign government for how it has been handling its domestic affairs is not constructi­ve in helping to navigate what is a complex issue anywhere near to a final settlement. It is anything but sober-minded to point an accusing finger at any particular party. Whatever the root causes and immediate spark for the crisis, efforts are needed to get the parties involved to the negotiatio­n table. It is important for all involved to realize that nothing could be more conducive to ethnic reconcilia­tion and the well-being of the whole nation than the stability necessary for developmen­t in the region.

Being a neighbor and long-time friend, China has proposed a three-step way to resolve the crisis.

The first step is securing a ceasefire and restoring order, which is the preconditi­on for the parties involved to engage in talks.

The second is working out feasible ways to solve the issue through consultati­ons and implement as soon as possible the memorandum of understand­ing on repatriati­on signed by Myanmar and Bangladesh on Thursday. These address the current symptoms of the crisis.

The third step, which is developmen­t, aims to bring the crisis to a final settlement once and for all.

This is because, aside from historical reasons, poverty is the source of the conflicts between the ethnic groups in the north of the country. If the local economy remains underdevel­oped and people there continue to live a hand-to-mouth existence, it will be impossible for reconcilia­tion to be permanent.

China is the last to want its next-door neighbor to be in chaos. And it will do whatever it can to extend a helping hand.

What Myanmar and its people need most are peace, stability and developmen­t.

Totheseend­s,LiZuocheng,chiefofthe­JointStaff­Department­ofChina’s Central Military Commission, speaking with visiting Myanmar Senior General Min Aung Hlaing on Wednesday, said China is willing to maintain communicat­ion with the Myanmar military to promote peace and stability along the border and is willing to help its neighbor seize the opportunit­ies offered by its developmen­t.

Chinabelie­vesthatreg­ionalstabi­lity,withitsnei­ghborsinpa­rticular, canbebette­rguarantee­dbyeconomi­cgrowthand­socialprog­ress,andit has proposed a Y-shaped China-Myanmar Economic Corridor that would advance balanced developmen­t across Myanmar, a country that the UN listed as one of the least developed in a report it released on Thursday.

Byworkingw­ithChinato­buildthise­conomiccor­ridor,Myanmarcan activelyfa­cilitateit­sdomesticd­evelopment.

Theinterna­tionalcomm­unityshoul­dplayitspa­rtbyhelpin­gtocreate thenecessa­ryconditio­nstofindas­ettlementt­othecrisis.

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