Suu Kyi reassures China about US ties

18 Sep, 2012

In her first substantive comments on a landmark trip to the United States, the Nobel Peace laureate said she did not want US engagement with Myanmar to be seen as "hostile" to China, the main ally of her country's former junta.

Suu Kyi, addressing the US Institute of Peace and Asia Society, said it was a "natural question" whether the United States was focusing on the nation formerly known as Burma in a bid to contain the influence of China.

But Suu Kyi said: "It does not mean that because the United States is engaging with Burma it should in any way be seen as a hostile step toward China."

"We can use our new situation to strengthen relations between all three countries," she said.

"For us to put it very simply, it would be to our advantage for the United States and China to establish friendly relations. This would help us a great deal," she said.

Suu Kyi also indicated that she was willing to see an end to US sanctions on Myanmar. The opposition leader supported restrictions in hopes of pressuring the military regime which nominally disbanded last year.

"For my part, I don't think we need to cling onto sanctions unnecessarily," Suu Kyi said. "We have to build our own democracy for ourselves and we would like US-Burma relations to be founded firmly on the recognition of the need of our own people to be accountable for their own destiny," she said.

The United States has been easing sanctions in hopes of encouraging reform and in July lifted restrictions on most US investment, despite Suu Kyi's prior warnings about doing business with the state-owned oil and gas firm which has been widely criticized for its labor record.

Suu Kyi said that President Thein Sein, who is visiting the United States next week, was sincere about change but warned that the judiciary was the "weakest arm" in the movement for reforms in Myanmar.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2012

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