YANGON, Burma (AP) — Democracy leader Aung
San Suu Kyi said Monday that Burma’s government has taken positive steps toward
reform in the year since she was released from house arrest but more needs to
be done, including freeing hundreds more political prisoners.
The Nobel peace laureate, speaking to more
than 100 journalists on the anniversary of her release, cited her meetings with
minister Aung Kyi and President Thein Sein as progress.
“Looking back at the past year, I think I can
say that it has been eventful, energizing and to a certain extent encouraging,”
said Suu Kyi, who was detained most of the past two decades by Burma’s former
military government.
The international community’s hopes were not
high after the country carefully orchestrated the Nov. 7, 2010, election. As
expected, the polls brought to power a proxy party for the military, which ran
the country since a 1962 coup.
But that perception has changed in recent
months, as the new government eased censorship, legalized labor unions,
suspended an unpopular, China-backed dam project and began talks with Suu Kyi’s
pro-democracy movement.
There are still key issues to be addressed,
however. Suu Kyi on Monday mentioned the plight of both political prisoners and
ethnic minorities as well as the need for rule of law and an independent
judiciary in the country.
“An issue of great importance to all of us who
are working for democracy in Burma is that of political prisoners. Some had
been released over the last year, but there are still many who remain in
prison,” Suu Kyi said, using the name for the country that the pro-democracy
movement prefers.
She said she had no news about wide
speculation that the government would announce the release of more political
prisoners Monday.
“We do not have any specific information on
who has been released if anybody has been released at all,” she said.
A government-appointed human rights body on
Sunday urged the president to release political prisoners or transfer them to
prisons close to their families, signaling such action may be imminent.
Burma’s three state-owned newspapers published
the open letter from National Human Rights Commission chairman Win Mra calling
for an amnesty “as a reflection of magnanimity,” or to transfer political
prisoners in remote prisons to facilities with easy access for their family
members.
The letter’s publication is significant
because the tightly controlled newspapers closely reflect government positions.
An amnesty of 6,359 prisoners in October happened the same day state-run
newspapers published a similar appeal.
A prisoner release in the next few days is
also anticipated because a meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations begins Thursday in Bali, Indonesia. Burma is seeking to chair ASEAN in
2014, and the release of political prisoners would be seen as a positive
development favoring its bid, which is likely to be decided at this week’s
summit.
No release had been announced by mid-afternoon
Monday.
Burma is estimated to hold as many as 2,000
political prisoners.
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