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South
Korean President Lee Myung-bak, right, shakes hands with Myanmar
opposition
leader Aung San Suu Kyi prior to a meeting in Yangon, Myanmar,
on Tuesday. (AP/Yonhap,
Kim Byung-man)
|
South
Korean President Lee Myung-bak, right, shakes hands with Myanmar opposition
leader Aung San Suu Kyi prior to a meeting in Yangon, Myanmar, on Tuesday.
(AP/Yonhap, Kim Byung-man)
Myanmar's
president has confirmed that his country bought weapons from North Korea during
the past 20 years and assured his South Korean counterpart that it will no
longer do so.
In a
meeting with visiting South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, Myanmar President
Thein Sein said his country never had nuclear cooperation with North Korea but
did have deals for conventional weapons, Lee's presidential Blue House said in
an announcement Tuesday.
Thein Sein
told Lee that Myanmar will no longer buy weapons from North Korea, honoring a
UN ban, South Korean presidential official Kim Tae-hyo told reporters traveling
with Lee, according to Blue House officials in Seoul.
Lee is on
an official visit to Myanmar, the first by a South Korean president since North
Korean commandos staged a bloody 1983 attack on visiting South Korean
dignitaries.
Myanmar cut
off diplomatic relations with North Korea after the attack, but restored them
in 2007 as it sought allies in the face of international sanctions over its
human rights record and failure to install a democratic government. Myanmar
also began buying weapons from North Korea, and was suspected of obtaining
nuclear weapons technology as well.
Myanmar is
taking steps to emerge from international isolation after decades of military
rule ended last year. Those changes were highlighted Tuesday when Lee met
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who was held for years under house arrest
but is now a member of Parliament.
Suu Kyi
said after the 45-minute meeting that South Korea and Myanmar have much in
common in having had to "take the hard road to democratic
leadership."
Lee,
speaking through an interpreter, said he and Suu Kyi had agreed that
"democracy, human rights and freedom must never be sacrificed because of
development."
He said he
had praised Thein Sein's contribution to democratization when he met the
Myanmar president on Monday.
He also
said he told Thein Sein that he hoped his government "will refrain from
any activities" with North Korea that could be considered in violation of
UN Security Council resolutions. He described this as a formal request.
A UN
resolution bars countries from obtaining all but small arms and light weapons
from North Korea.
Lee on
Tuesday made a brief visit to the site of the 1983 bombing, Martyr's Mausoleum,
a monument to Suu Kyi's father, Myanmar independence hero Gen. Aung San. The
attack left 21 dead, 17 of them South Korean, but failed to kill its target,
then-President Chun Doo-hwan, who arrived late and was not harmed.
A statement
from Lee's office said he also agreed to expand South Korean financial
assistance to Myanmar.
It said
South Korea agreed to help Myanmar develop human resources, build a think tank
and invite Myanmar students to South Korea in an effort to share its successful
experience in economic development. (nvn)
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