Brussels
(AFP) - The European Union announced Monday it will send nearly 700 million
euros in aid to Myanmar over the next seven years to boost the country's
transition from army-led isolation to international player.
The
announcement came after US President Barack Obama added his voice last month to
concerns that the transition is backsliding in certain areas, including press
freedom and human rights.
The EU said
Myanmar will receive 688 million euros ($900 million) from 2014 to 2020 to
"reinforce support to the country's multiple transition," including
efforts to promote peace within the country.
Some 14 of
16 major rebel groups have signed ceasefire agreements with the quasi-civilian
government as part of reforms in recent years. But deals with the Kachin
Independence Army in northern Kachin state and the Ta'ang National Liberation
Army in the eastern state of Shan have proved elusive.
In a
statement, the European Commission, the EU executive arm, said the funds will
also help develop rural areas and agriculture, improve food supplies and
nutrition, support education as well as improve governance and the rule of law.
"With
this support over the next seven years, the EU will build on its ongoing
initiatives for the benefit of all people in Myanmar," the statement
added.
Myanmar,
formerly known as Burma and ruled by the British until 1948, was plunged into
isolation by a military regime that seized power in 1962.
But in the
past three years, its reforms have earned international praise and the removal
of most sanctions.
The
quasi-civilian leadership, which remains dominated by former generals, has
freed most political prisoners, allowed pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi and
her party into parliament and ended draconian media censorship.
But Suu Kyi
cannot stand for the top post of president because a clause in the
constitution, 59f, bans those with a foreign spouse or children. Her late
husband and two sons are British.
Obama last
month raised concerns about clause 59f, saying "the amendment process
needs to reflect inclusion rather than exclusion".

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