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DEMOCRACY
Myanmar's Suu Kyi to visit China this year: party
by Staff Writers
Yangon (AFP) Nov 04, 2014


Obama to meet Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar on Nov 14: White House
Washington (AFP) Nov 04, 2014 - US President Barack Obama will meet Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon on November 14, during a six-day trip that also includes stops in China and Australia, the White House said Tuesday.

Earlier in the November 12-14 Myamar stop, Obama will participate in a US-ASEAN Summit in Nay Pi Taw, where a bilateral meeting with Myanmar president Thein Sein is planned, the statement said.

Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party is favored in upcoming legislative elections at the end of 2015, but the Myanmar constitution currently bars her from running for president.

Last month, the parliament agreed to consider changing the constitution to allow her candidacy.

Obama called the Myanmar president last week to underscore "the need for an inclusive and credible process for conducting the 2015 elections."

The government has promised the vote next year will be the freest in the country's modern history after the military ceded direct power to a quasi-civilian government three years ago.

Thein Sein has surprised the international community in recent years with a number of dramatic reforms that have seen international sanctions removed as the country opens up to the world.

But the country still faces a myriad of challenges -- including an opaque legal system, creaking infrastructure and significant poverty levels -- that will need to be tackled by any new government after next year's election.

Obama's Asia trip will also include a stop in China from November 10-12, where he is to participate in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum and have a state visit with President Xi Jinping.

And from November 15-16, Obama will head to Australia for the G20 Leaders Summit and to deliver a speech on US leadership in the Asia-Pacific.

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi will make her first official visit to China next month, her party said Tuesday, as the veteran activist reaches out to a powerful ally of the former junta.

The Nobel laureate, who plans to lead her party into elections next year seen as the litmus test of Myanmar's transition towards democracy, will travel to China within weeks, her party said.

"It is true that there is a trip planned to China in December," a senior member of her National League for Democracy (NLD) told AFP, asking to remain unnamed.

He said it was not yet clear who Suu Kyi would be meeting.

The Myanmar politician, who has publicly stated her wish to become president if rules currently barring her from the job are removed, has previously suggested the relationship with Beijing is crucial to her country.

China is a major investor in resource-rich Myanmar and was a key ally when the country languished in isolation under the junta.

But it has seen its influence wane as Myanmar's reforms have thrust it into the global spotlight.

Changes, including allowing Suu Kyi and her party into parliament and freeing most political prisoners, have seen Western sanctions largely swept away and caused a wave of international investors to rush to the country.

But projects to tap the nation's abundant natural resources for export to China have sparked particular resentment as the country opens up.

Myanmar's president suspended a Chinese-backed mega-dam in September 2011 after a public outcry.

Suu Kyi drew flak for defending a controversial Chinese-backed copper mine in March 2013, urging local people to drop calls for its closure because it would harm the local and national economy.

"We have to get along with the neighbouring country whether we like it or not," she told angry villagers at the time.

But the 69-year-old politician, who spent a total of 15 years under house arrest during military rule, also risked provoking China's anger when she met the Dalai Lama on the sidelines of a Prague rights conference in September 2013.

Officials from China's embassy in Yangon said they were unable to confirm the visit when contacted by AFP. But they said Beijing kept in contact with all Myanmar political parties, including the NLD.


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