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Thursday, July 26, 2012
Suu Kyi asks MPs to back minority rights
Suu Kyi asks MPs to back minority rights
Suu KyimemintaAhli Parlimenuntuk menyokonghak-hakminoriti
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi speaks during a regular
session at the lower house of parliament in Naypyitaw, Wednesday. — AFP
NAYPYITAW — Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi
used her first speech in parliament Wednesday to call for laws
protecting the rights of the country’s impoverished ethnic minorities.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner and democracy crusader won her first seat
in Myanmar’s parliament in a historic April by-election that was seen as
a key step in the country’s transformation from military rule to
fledgling democracy.
Suu Kyi stood from her seat toward the back of Myanmar’s parliament to
call for an end to discrimination against ethnic minorities as part of
the “emergence of a genuine democratic country.”
“Based on the spirit of equality, mutual respect and understanding,” she
said, “I would like to urge all lawmakers to enact necessary laws or
amend laws to protect the rights of ethnic nationalities.”
Suu Kyi’s comments came in support of a motion by a ruling-party
lawmaker from the ethnic Shan state on upholding ethnic minority rights.
She referred to soaring poverty rates in Chin, Kachin, Shan and Rakhine
states, noting that protecting minority rights required more than just
maintaining ethnic languages and cultures.
“The high poverty rates in ethnic states clearly indicate that
development in ethnic regions is not satisfactory — and ethnic conflicts
in these regions have not ceased,” she said during her brief speech.
Suu Kyi did not mention last month’s communal violence in western
Myanmar between Rakhine Buddhists and Muslim Rohingyas that left at
least 78 people dead and prompted a government crackdown in the region.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner has faced rare criticism from rights groups
for not offering stronger support for the Rohingya, who are considered
by most in Myanmar to be illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and are not
one of the recognized ethnic groups of Myanmar.
The United Nations says there are about 800,000 Rohingya in Myanmar and
considers them to be among the most persecuted people in the world.
Suu Kyi’s pro-democracy movement has long been loosely allied with most
of the country’s dozen or so major ethnic minority groups, who, like her
opposition party, also faced repression under the previous military
regime.
Many of the ethnic groups fought bitter civil wars for greater autonomy,
some of which lasted decades. Since taking office last year, President
Thein Sein has rolled back many of the repressive actions of the
military regimes that preceded him. — AP
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