Aung Min, a close confidant of Burma’s President Thein Sein, says Burma
will do more to end decades-old fighting in ethnic regions and it will help
refugees return to home.
Aung Min traveled to Washington
to attend the Congressional Gold Medal award ceremony for Burmese democracy
leader Suu Kyi. He said he was "proud" that a Burmese citizen was
awarded such a high honor.
He told the Voice of America
Burmese Service that the Burmese government would make good on pledges to end
ongoing skirmishes, especially in Kachin state.
“Yes,” he said. “The president
already promised there would not be offensives apart from some defensive
actions. I also tell you the army is strictly following the orders. There will
be no open season offensive. I guarantee it.”
He told Radio Free Asia that
Burma is “one step” away from striking a peace deal with ethnic Kachin rebels,
who have been engaged in a running conflict with the government for the past
year.
“For now, only the Kachin are
left in the [peace] process. But I think even the Kachin issue—this problem
will be solved in only one step further,” Aung Min, a minister in President
Thein Sein's office, told RFA.
In the award ceremony, US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton acknowledged Aung Min as well as Than Swe,
the new Burmese ambassador in Washington, for putting aside their differences
with the opposition and honoring Aung San Suu Kyi’s achievement.
Aung Min said he was pleased to
have been praised during the event by both Clinton and Aung San Suu Kyi for his
role in helping with Burma’s national transition.
“I am glad I had the chance to
attend this kind of ceremony and to perform my duties as a politician. I am
very proud and satisfied,” he said, noting that his decision to attend the
ceremony demonstrated how far the Burmese government has come.
“We are mainly focusing now on
ethnic issues and reconciliation, which we all need. In national reconciliation
we aim to be all-inclusive,” he said.
Aung Min said the military has
taken steps to try to resolve the Kachin conflict.
“Now the positions of the troops
are overlapping,” he said, in the VOA report. “There have been some
misunderstandings and some shootings. My objective is to make the troops
withdraw from their positions so they are at least five kilometers apart as
required in the primary cease-fire agreement. Only then can people sit to
negotiate more.”
Aung Min told VOA that the
government plans to establish industrial zones that will allow the refugees to
earn a living by working in textile manufacturing or other industries.
Human Rights Watch estimates
140,000 refugees live in underfunded camps along the border with Thailand.
The Burmese government this week
released 514 prisoners – including an estimated 90 political prisoners – as
part of a general amnesty. But activists and rights groups have responded
cautiously, saying hundreds of prisoners are still being held despite the
government's promise to release them.
Mizzima News
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