Obama to visit Myanmar this month

Obama suukyiweb1
File photo of Barack Obama with Aung San Suu Kyi

YANGON/WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama will become the first US leader to visit Myanmar this month, the strongest international endorsement of the fragile democratic transition in the Southeast Asian country after half a century of military rule.
Obama will travel to Myanmar during a November 17-20 tour of Southeast Asia that will also take him to Thailand and Cambodia, the White House said, confirming his first international trip since he won a second term in the election.
He is going ahead with the trip despite recent sectarian violence in western Myanmar that has drawn concern from the United States and European Union.
The visit to Myanmar, the first by a sitting US president, will give Obama a chance to meet President Thein Sein and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi to encourage the “ongoing democratic transition”, White House spokesman Jay Carney said.
Obama will be in Myanmar on November 19, according to a senior government source in Yangon, where people expressed delight.
“I believe it is a clear sign of improved ties between the two countries and I am very glad that our NLD party played an important role in working for the emergence of this situation,” said NLD executive committee member Han Tha Myint.
Myint Soe, vice-chairman of the Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry, said the historic visit showed Myanmar had now been admitted into the international community.
“It’s good for President Obama to see things with his own eyes,” he said. “I would like to request him to keep encouraging the democratization process in our country by helping to promote the socioeconomic standards of the people.”
Obama’s presence in Myanmar, also known as Burma, will highlight what his administration sees as a first-term foreign policy achievement and a development that could help counter China’s influence in a strategically important region.
Washington takes some credit for a carrot-and-stick approach that pushed Myanmar’s long-ruling generals toward democratic change and led to Thein Sein taking office as a reformist president in 2011.
But Obama also risks criticism for rewarding the new government too soon, especially after security forces failed to prevent bloody ethnic violence in the west of the country.

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