Manila Bulletin

PH urges Myanmar to release Suu Kyi and revert to previous state of affairs

- By ROY C. MABASA

The Philippine­s on Tuesday, March 2 reiterated its call for Myanmar to return to its “previously existing state of affairs” following a deadly weekend violent confrontat­ion between protesters and the military that resulted in the death of 18 people and injured 30 others.

“Our call is for the complete return to the previously existing state of affairs: with respect to the preeminent role of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi; alongside the Army her father created for the protection of the people he led to freedom and the country he gave them at the cost of his life. This is what is needed,” the Philippine­s said in a statement at the Informal Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Ministers Meeting on Regional and Internatio­nal Issues.

In the statement, the Philippine­s also urged Myanmar to take the “first step to immediatel­y release former Nobel Peace prize winner and democracy icon Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and engage in subsequent dialogue among the parties involved in the pursuit of their country’s destiny.

Suu Kyi, along with other civilian leaders, were arrested in the early morning raid following a military coup on Feb. 1.

“The rest of ASEAN must stand by Myanmar; ready to give what help it is asked by the people and government of Myanmar,” it said.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. who read the statement at the ASEAN meeting said: “I warned The Lady about that: never to trust those who shattered countries like Libya. But even so we equally recognize the unifying role of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi in her country’s history and in its destiny.”

Locsin told fellow ASEAN ministers that the Philippine­s have always stood by Myanmar’s side as it tried to fix its ethnic challenges as he criticized what he called the “legacies of reckless and opportunis­tic Western imperialis­m.”

“We have stood by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi in particular; and defended her against calumnies from hypocrites in the West. We have hit back hard at her pro-democracy and human rights critics— not a single one of whom has done anything at all for democracy and human rights; let alone as much as she has at great risk to her life and with great loss in her life,” he stated.

While the Philippine­s has expressed its concern about the recent develop LONDON, ments in its ASEAN neighbor, it however took the position of recognizin­g the Army’s role in preserving Myanmar’s territoria­l integrity and national security.

“It recognizes that the Myanmar army that is subject of different sentiments within the country has a role to play in achieving the peace and unity in Myanmar,” DFA Strategic Communicat­ions Executive Director Ivy Banzon Abalos told reporters.

The ASEAN informal meeting was attended by the 10 ASEAN foreign ministers, including Myanmar’s militaryap­pointed Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin.

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