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By David GollustThe United States Wednesday condemned1 Burma's arrest of at least 13 activists2 who staged rare public demonstrations3 this week against government-mandated fuel price increases. The State Department accuses the military government in Rangoon of a "blatant4" attempt to silence peaceful protests. VOA's David Gollust reports from the State Department.
Public protests are rare in Burma, where the military government brutally5 repressed pro-democracy demonstrations in 1988 and killed an estimated 3,000 people.
Demonstrators march on Insein road in northern Rangoon suburb to protest massive fuel price hikes, 22 Aug 2007 |
The arrests of the activists, among them several leaders of the 88 Generation group, drew condemnation6 from State Department Acting7 Spokesman Gonzalo Gallegos.
"The United States calls for the immediate8 release of these activists, and for an end to the regime's blatant attempt to intimidate9 and silence those who are engaged in peaceful promotion10 of democracy and human rights in Burma," said Gallegos. "We call on the regime to engage in meaningful dialogue with members of Burma's democracy movement and ethnic11 minority groups, and to make tangible12 steps toward a transition to civilian13, democratic rule."
Prominent activists from 88 Generation Students group, Ko Ko Gyi (l), Min Ko Naing (second from left), and Htay Kywe (thrid from left), May 2007 |
In the statement, Gallegos renewed the U.S. call on Burma to release all political prisoners, including Aung San Su Kyi, who has been under detention15 most of the time since her National League for Democracy party won elections in 1990 but was barred from taking power.
He also urged Rangoon authorities to end military attacks and human rights abuses against civilians16 in ethnic-minority areas, and to lift restrictions17 on humanitarian18 organizations in Burma.
Gallegos said improving relations between the United States and Burma depends on the government taking "concrete and credible19" steps in that direction.
The United States maintains only limited diplomatic ties with Burma, and senior U.S. officials refuse to visit the country because they have been denied access to Aung San Suu Kyi and other opposition figures.
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Eric John met Burmese Foreign Minister Nyan Win and other officials of the Rangoon government in late June in Beijing.
The unusual meeting, arranged by China, was the highest-level U.S.-Burmese discussion since 2003. The State Department called it a frank exchange of views that yielded no indication of change by the Burmese on human rights.
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