Yahoo – AFP,
Kelly MacNamara, Jérôme Cartillier
![]() |
US
President Barack Obama and Myanmar's opposition leader Aung San
Suu Kyi speak
at a press conference in Yangon, on November 14, 2014
(AFP Photo/Mandel Ngan)
|
US
President Barack Obama urged Myanmar Friday to hold "free, fair and inclusive"
elections as he threw his weight behind a bid by opposition leader Aung San Suu
Kyi to change a constitution that bars her from the presidency.
Obama held
talks with fellow Nobel laureate Suu Kyi at her lakeside villa in Myanmar's
commercial capital Yangon, after arriving from the capital Naypyidaw where he
discussed the nation's troubled reform process with President Thein Sein.
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US
President Barack Obama visits the
Secretariat Building in Yangon, on Nov.14,
2014 (AFP Photo/Mandel Ngan)
|
Suu Kyi,
who has publicly stated her desire to be president, is barred from the top
office by a constitutional clause ruling out anyone with foreign spouse or
children from the presidency.
Her late
husband and two sons are British and the democracy champion is seeking an
amendment.
Using
strong language, Obama took up the issue telling reporters that "the
amendment process needs to reflect inclusion rather than exclusion."
"I
don't understand the provision that would bar somebody from running for
president because of who his (someone's) children are."
Suu Kyi,
whose National League for Democracy (NLD) party is widely expected to sweep
polls in late 2015, branded the contentious clause as "unfair, unjust and
undemocratic" adding "it is not right to discriminate against one
particular citizen".
The issue
is currently being debated in parliament, where 25 percent of the seats are
ring-fenced for the military.
"The
majority of our people understand that this constitution cannot stand as it
is," if democracy is to be achieved, the democracy figurehead added.
The pair
spoke in the garden of Suu Kyi's villa in a reprise of their landmark meeting
in 2012, which saw the US leader throw his political might behind Myanmar's
transition from junta rule.
![]() |
US President
Barack Obama is escorted by
Myanmar's President Thein Sein following a
meeting
at the Presidential Palace in
Naypyidaw on November 13, 2014 (AFP
Photo/Mandel
Ngan)
|
Stalled
reforms
"We
recognise change is hard and you do not always move in a straight line but I'm
optimistic," Obama said.
During his
two-night trip to Myanmar the US leader has also raised alarm over the
direction of reforms, however, citing the cramping of freedom of expression,
ongoing conflicts and the treatment of Myanmar's minority groups -- especially
the Muslim Rohingya.
Obama was
whisked from Yangon airport to tour the British colonial-era secretariat
building in downtown Yangon where Suu Kyi's father, independence hero General
Aung San, was gunned down by political rivals in 1947.
Their talks
at Suu Kyi's lakeside family home come almost four years to the day after she
was released from years of house arrest.
Her street,
which also houses the US Embassy, was sealed off Friday with dozens of police
at each end as well as a scrum of reporters and cameramen and some NLD members.
He then
moved to university compound for a town hall style question-and-answer session
where the serious political discussion was punctuated by peels of laughter as a
relaxed Obama took off his jacket and bantered with the mainly young audience.
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A woman
waves a US flag wearing a t-shirt
with portraits of US President Barack
Obama and Aung San Suu Kyi, in Yangon,
on November 14, 2014 (AFP Photo/Ye
Aung Thu)
|
On his last
visit, Obama received a fanfare welcome from thrilled locals a year after Thein
Sein began to open up the country.
Most
political prisoners have been released and by-elections have seen Suu Kyi
become a lawmaker, while foreign investors have arrived in lockstep with the
lifting of most sanctions.
But the
atmosphere has slowly soured, with many observers saying reforms have stalled
and this time there was little of the streetside cheering for Obama.
Even Sui
Kyi's star power earned as the torch-bearer of democracy during the dark junta
years having waned in the eyes of some as she has embedded herself as a
politician rather than resistance figure.
For his
part, Obama has been battered domestically with poor approval numbers
compounded by a thumping defeat for his Democrats in last week's mid-term
elections.
His next
stop is Brisbane for talks with G20 leaders.




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