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US sceptical on Myanmar elections
Posted: 05 January 2010 0821 hrs

 
 
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WASHINGTON: The United States on Monday voiced doubts on whether Myanmar's upcoming elections would be credible and urged the military regime to engage the opposition and ethnic minorities.

Myanmar's leader Senior General Than Shwe, in a message read out on Monday for the nation's 62nd independence anniversary, urged people to make "correct choices" in the elections which the military government wants to hold sometime in 2010.

State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said the United States was taking a "measured approach" to elections until it could assess the conditions, including whether the opposition and ethnic groups will participate.

"So far we have not seen any meaningful steps by the regime to indicate it is putting in place measures that would lead to credible elections," Kelly said.

"Much of the opposition's leadership remains in prison, there is no space for political dissent or debate and no freedom of press," Kelly said.

Kelly called for Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, to engage opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and ethnic leaders "in a comprehensive dialogue on democratic reform".

"This would be a first step towards inclusive elections," he said.

The election would be the first since 1990. Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy won the last election by a landslide but was never permitted to take office.

Instead, Aung San Suu Kyi has spent most of the past two decades under house arrest despite appeals for her release and her winning of the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize.

President Barack Obama's administration has switched gears on Myanmar, opening up a dialogue to improve relations with a state that has long been treated as a pariah by the United States.

Myanmar's opposition leaders say the elections will be a sham to legitimise military rule and some have voiced fear that the military government sees the dialogue with the United States as a way to bide time before the vote.


- AFP/so

 

 


 
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