Saturday, July 28, 2007

UN Security Council Expresses Concern over Crackdown

After initial resistance from China, the UN Security Council issued a statement of concern about Burma's violent crackdown on Buddhist monks and urged the military regime to let in a special envoy.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's special envoy, Ibrahim Gambari, was expected to leave for the region Wednesday night after briefing the emergency council meeting in the afternoon on the fatal violence.

Council diplomats said China, which has close economic ties to Burma, did not want any document issued after the closed-door session but relented and agreed to a brief statement, which was read to reporters by France's UN Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert.

"Members of the council have expressed their concern vis a vis the situation, and have urged restraint, especially from the government of Myanmar [Burma]," the statement said.

The junta's forces opened fire on anti-government protesters in the center of the country's largest city, Rangoon. At least five people died, including monks.

Ban called on Burma's government to exercise its "utmost restraint" and later met one-on-one with Burma's Foreign Minister Nyan Win. On the way to the meeting, a reporter asked about the five reported deaths and Win replied: "You asked if five people died and we said no."

The council's statement said it "welcomed the decision by the secretary-general to urgently dispatch his special envoy to the region and underlines the importance that Mr Gambari be received by the authorities of Myanmar [Burma] as soon as possible."

Indonesia's new UN Ambassador Marty Natalegawa said Burma was not on the agenda of a ministerial meeting Thursday of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, Asean, on the sidelines of the high-level UN General Assembly session, but the violence was likely to come up. Burma is a member of the 10-nation group.

The United States and the council's European Union members—Britain, France, Italy and Belgium—had condemned the attacks and called on the country's military rulers to stop the violence and open a dialogue with pro-democracy leaders.

"What's going on in Burma is outrageous," US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said after a luncheon meeting of ministers from the eight major industrialized nations. "The regime needs to stop using violence against peaceful people and get to a dialogue so that they can have reconciliation."

China and Russia contend that the situation in Burma is an internal affair and doesn't threaten international peace and security—as required for Security Council action—so getting them to agree to the press statement was considered a positive step.

"It is a huge breakthrough," Yvonne Terlingen, UN representative for Amnesty International, told AP Wednesday night. "It is unprecedented that the Security Council made a statement about human rights in Burma—and that is very important."

China's UN Ambassador Wang Guangya told reporters after the meeting that the most important thing is to see that the Burma authorities "restore stability," and to get Gambari into the country as soon as possible.

"China is a neighbor to Myanmar [Burma], so we more than anyone else wish to see that Myanmar [Burma] will achieve stability, national reconciliation, and we want to see them making progress on the road of democratization," he said. "We hope that the government and people there could just sort out their differences."

Wang said that he believed sanctions would not be helpful. He added that "these problems now at this stage (do) not constitute a threat to international and regional peace and stability."