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US First Lady visits Myanmar refugees
Posted: 07 August 2008 1716 hrs

  US First Lady Laura Bush speaks to Karen refugees during a visit to Mae La Refugee Camp
 
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MAE LA REFUGEE CAMP, Thailand: US First Lady Laura Bush, a vocal critic of Myanmar's military government, toured a refugee camp on Thursday and called on the military regime to open dialogue with the opposition.

Highlighting abuses in military-run Myanmar has been the chief cause of Mrs Bush, and with her daughter Barbara she made her way through a muddy settlement which is home to tens of thousands who have fled the junta's repression.

She thanked the Thai government for allowing the nine camps housing more than 120,000 refugees that string the border with Myanmar.

"If we could see a change in the Burmese government ... so people could move home in safety, that would be the best result," Mrs Bush told camp leaders, referring to Myanmar by its previous name.

"The best solution would be if General Than Shwe's regime would start real dialogue," she said after being greeted by refugees performing song and dance in traditional dress.

About 35,000 refugees huddle in Mae La camp at the foot of forested mountains, which many risked their lives to cross in their desperation to flee military crackdowns on ethnic rebel armies in their homeland.

Mae La is on the site of the first refugee camp, which was set up in 1984 as Myanmar's army advanced into Karen state and forced thousands over the border.

Most are from Myanmar's ethnic groups, including many Christians from the Karen minority.

The United States has pledged to resettle 26,811 refugees, and Mrs Bush and her daughter – who were swaddled in shawls woven by the refugees – also visited a class teaching the people about life in America.

But Mrs Bush said: "Most people do not want to have to move to third countries. They would rather move to their home villages in safety and security."

President George W. Bush, who arrived in Thailand on Wednesday, hailed his wife's efforts to highlight abuses in Myanmar, which has been ruled by the military since 1962 and keeps democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi locked up.

"We seek an end to tyranny in Burma," he said in a speech in Bangkok on US policy in Asia.

"This noble cause has many devoted champions, and I happen to be married to one of them ... America reiterates our call on Burma's military junta to release Aung San Suu Kyi and all other political prisoners."

The president will later meet with exiled Myanmar dissidents and politicians, a day before the 20-year anniversary of a pro-democracy uprising there which was crushed by the army, leaving 3,000 dead.

Aung San Suu Kyi led her National League for Democracy (NLD) party to election victory in 1990, but instead of recognising the result the junta kept her under house arrest, where she has now spent most of the last 19 years.

The generals have suppressed any sign of dissent, and more than 2,000 political prisoners are believed to be behind bars in the isolated nation.

On Friday, activists in Myanmar will silently mark two decades since the August 8, 1988 uprising, when students led activists, Buddhist monks, and even young military cadets into the streets, only to face a massacre by the army.

Last year, protesters again poured onto the streets to rally against economic hardship and junta rule. This time, 31 people were killed in the resulting crackdown, the United Nations has said.


- AFP/so

 


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