As Burmese President Thein Sein prepares to speak to the UN General
Assembly in New York on Thursday, his closest aides said they are not worried about
him being upstaged by Aung San Suu Kyi. He reportedly will leave Naypyitaw on
Monday for the US for a four-day trip.
Minister Aung Min, who attended
an award ceremony for Suu Kyi in Washington last week, said they will work
together for democracy, just as Nelson Mandela did with South Africa's last
apartheid-era leader.
“We don't worry about that,” he
told reporters at the United Nations in New York.
Suu Kyi has repeatedly said she
and the president are working together and that compromise is something all
Burmese politicians must learn in order for the country to go forward toward
democracy.
Suu Kyi met briefly on Friday
with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, saying she and Thein Sein had to “learn
to work together.”
President Thein Sein has many
signs to point to as a reformist politician, winning international praise for
his rapid reforms including the release of up to 650 political prisoners, land
reforms, media liberalization and a new foreign investment law, which is now in
the process of being approved.
“The president alone cannot
undertake all democratic reforms. I don't think Aung San Suu Kyi alone can
accomplish everything either. But the president and Aung San Suu Kyi will have
to work together,” Aung Min said, according to wire service reports. “When you
look at South Africa, Nelson Mandela alone could not have achieved what South
Africa has managed to achieve. It was mainly because Mr. Mandela and Mr. de
Klerk, they worked together.”
The Financial Times reported this
weekend that on her 17-day US tour, Suu Kyi is being accompanied by Derek
Mitchell, the new US ambassador to Burma, a telling sign of the prestige Suu
Kyi is given by foreign governments. Even as the leader of a small political
party, she is acknowledged as the one person who has the potential of bringing
the disparate forces in the country together.
A trusted senior minister said
the president is “humble” and does not mind the media attention she
receives. “He is doing his job, she is
doing hers,” he said.
Prior to his US visit, Thein Sein
spent three-days at a trade fair in China, where officials said he renewed
close ties.
“China has for a long time
provided a large amount of sincere support and help, and stood at Myanmar's
side at the most difficult of times. Myanmar's people will never forget this,”
Thein Sein said in statement released late Friday.
Prior to the latest Burmese
reforms, China emerged as Burma's biggest ally, investing in infrastructure,
hydropower dams and oil-and-gas pipelines to transport energy to China.
The United States, along with the
European Union, Japan and other Western countries, have all moved to ease
sanctions on Burma, and the US and Burma are rapidly increasing ties.
Mizzima News
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