Yahoo – AFP,
Benjamin Haas, 11 June 2015
![]() |
Myanmar's
pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi (left) shake hands with
Chinese President
Xi Jinping ahead of their talks at the Great Hall of the People
in Beijing, on
June 11, 2015 (AFP Photo)
|
Myanmar's
Aung San Suu Kyi met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on Thursday, state
media said, during her closely watched first visit that China hopes will
establish a line of communication with the influential opposition leader.
Suu Kyi met
Xi at Beijing's Great Hall of the People, according to the official Xinhua News
Agency, which did not immediately provide details on what was discussed.
Beijing was
a key backer of Myanmar's former military junta while it was under Western
sanctions -- most of which have been lifted since 2011 -- and a much-needed
international ally for a brutal regime that crushed dissent and kept Suu Kyi
under house arrest for more than 15 years.
But
China-Myanmar relations have cooled as the country has introduced democratic
reforms and opened up economically to the West while in recent months an ethnic
insurgency in the Kokang region of Myanmar has spilled over the border into
China.
The visit comes
as Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party is expected to perform
strongly in elections later this year and China looks to develop a rapport with
the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize winner.
Suu Kyi
came to China at the invitation of the Communist Party, of which Xi is the
general secretary.
"China
and Myanmar are close, friendly neighbours," Xi said, according to Xinhua.
"China
always looks at the China-Myanmar relationship from a strategic and long-term
perspective," he added.
"We hope and believe that the Myanmar side will also maintain a consistent stance on China-Myanmar relationship and be committed to advancing friendly ties, no matter how its domestic situation changes."
![]() |
Myanmar's
pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi is visiting China
at the invitation of
the Chinese Communist Party (AFP Photo)
|
"We hope and believe that the Myanmar side will also maintain a consistent stance on China-Myanmar relationship and be committed to advancing friendly ties, no matter how its domestic situation changes."
Rare
visit
Xinhua did
not immediately report Suu Kyi's remarks.
Suu Kyi
arrived in Beijing on Wednesday with an NLD delegation and met later in the
evening with a senior Communist Party official Wang Jiarui, Xinhua reported
late Wednesday.
It is rare
for China to invite an opposition leader to visit, given its policy of avoiding
involvement in what it calls the internal affairs of other countries.
Still, Suu
Kyi's welcome has all the hallmarks of an official visit -- the imposing Great
Hall of the People is where Xi regularly welcomes visiting heads of state.
"The
Chinese realise they should not keep all their eggs in one basket and they see
they need to build bridges," said Willy Lam, a professor at the Chinese
University of Hong Kong.
"This
policy shift is an improvement and represents a maturity in Beijing's attitude
towards relationships with authoritarian regimes," he added.
"They
used to just invest and build relationships with the powers that be."
Since
launching reforms in 2011, Myanmar President Thein Sein has reached out to the
United States and other countries.
But the
69-year-old Suu Kyi is unable to stand for president herself because of a law
scripted by the junta forbidding people who have been married to foreigners --
as she was before her British husband's death -- or those who have foreign
children from running for president, something she is trying to change.
There is
also considerable irony in China welcoming a noted democracy advocate and Nobel
Prize winner while Liu Xiaobo, a Chinese Nobel Peace Prize winner, languishes
in prison after being sentenced to 11 years in prison in 2009 for circulating a
petition calling for democratic reforms.
![]() |
Myanmar
pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi arrives in Beijing on
June 10, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Fred Dufour)
|
China's
foreign ministry said Wednesday that China hopes the visit will bolster
"mutual understanding and trust".
Suu Kyi
will also travel to Shanghai and the southwestern province of Yunnan, China's
Beijing Youth Daily newspaper reported Thursday. The report did not say where
in Yunnan she would go, but part of the province borders Myanmar where the
ethnic fighting has occurred.
Suu Kyi
became one of the world's most famous political prisoners during her house
arrest for much of the 1990s and 2000s because of her outspoken opposition to
military rule. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991.
But her
global image as an upholder of human rights has lost some of its lustre as she
has come under criticism for her reluctance to speak out on the plight of
Myanmar's unwanted Rohingya Muslims, who are at the centre of a migrant crisis
engulfing the region.



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.