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U.N. envoy back in Asia to press for Myanmar talks

He will also meet with nations that oppose sanctions on the regime.

THE WORLD

October 15, 2007|Paul Watson, Times Staff Writer

JAKARTA, INDONESIA — Struggling against Myanmar's stubborn generals and neighbors skeptical of sanctions, a United Nations envoy returned to the region Sunday to push for negotiations between the junta and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Ibrahim Gambari, once a foreign minister for a Nigerian military regime, is to begin talks today with officials in Thailand before visiting Malaysia and Indonesia. All three belong to the Assn. of Southeast Asian Nations, which opposes imposing more sanctions on fellow member Myanmar, also known as Burma.


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Gambari is also scheduled to visit regional powers India, China and Japan before returning to Myanmar for his second round of crisis meetings in two weeks.

He had planned to return to Myanmar in mid-November, but U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told him to speed up the mediation effort after the U.N. Security Council on Thursday unanimously said it "strongly deplores" a violent crackdown that began last month. Myanmar has acknowledged that at least 10 people were killed, though activists and Western governments believe the toll is higher. Thousands of people were arrested.

In his Oct. 2 meeting with senior junta leader Gen. Than Shwe, Gambari failed to persuade the regime to stop the bloody repression. It was almost a repeat of a failed mission last year, when the generals also stonewalled Gambari.

But international outrage over images of soldiers shooting unarmed demonstrators last month forced the junta to make a seemingly minor concession that the U.N. envoy may be able to leverage into significant progress.

Amid U.S. and European Union threats of new sanctions, such as a possible arms embargo, the generals named Deputy Labor Minister Maj. Gen. Aung Kyi to handle any talks with Suu Kyi. He is described as a moderate to whom fellow generals have turned to handle vexing image problems, such as allegations that Myanmar uses forced labor.

The junta fed doubts about its willingness to reform by insisting that Suu Kyi meet certain conditions, such as ending her support for sanctions against the regime, before any talks could begin.

Suu Kyi, a 1991 Nobel Peace Prize winner who has been in detention for 12 of the last 18 years, has previously insisted on negotiations without preconditions.

Despite the threat of sanctions, Myanmar's junta appears confident it can fend off pressure for significant moves toward democracy, as it has repeatedly in its 45 years in power. The generals insist the military government provides the best guarantee of stability and economic development in a poor and fractious country.

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