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In this Myanmar News Agency photo released by China's Xinhua news agency, newly-appointed Burma Liaison Minister Aung Kyi, right, meets with Aung San Suu Kyi, detained leader of the National League for Democracy, at the state guest house in Rangoon, Thursday. [AP Photo/Myanmar News Agency via Xinhua] |
A retired major general, Aung Kyi, was appointed to the post on October 8 to hold talks with Suu Kyi.
It is not clear if this is Suu Kyi's first meeting with Aung Kyi, who on Wednesday was elevated to labor minister from deputy labor minister.
With Aung Kyi's appointment, the junta said it hoped to achieve "smooth relations" with Suu Kyi. Early this month the New Light of Myanmar newspaper, a mouthpiece of the junta, printed a brief official announcement on its front page saying that Kyi had been appointed "minister for relations" to coordinate contacts with Suu Kyi, the country's democracy icon.
Appointing a liaison officer was suggested by UN special envoy Ibrahim Gambari during his September 29-Oct. 2 visit to Burma, state media said.
Gambari met with both top junta officials and Suu Kyi.
A protest movement began August 19 over the government raising fuel prices. It mushroomed over weeks into a broad-based anti-government movement pressing for democratic reforms.
Tens of thousands demonstrated—the largest protests in nearly two decades of brutal military rule.
Gambari's trip came after troops quelled mass protests with gunfire. The government said 10 people were killed, but dissident groups put the death toll at up to 200 and say 6,000 people were detained, including thousands of monks.
Aung Kyi's exact duties have not been detailed, but it appeared he would coordinate all of Suu Kyi's contacts with both the regime and the United Nations, which is seeking to end the political deadlock between democracy advocates and a military that has ruled since 1962.
Aung Kyi has a reputation among foreign diplomats, UN officials and aid groups as being relatively accessible and reasonable compared to top junta leaders, who are highly suspicious of outsiders. He has had the delicate task of dealing with the International Labor Organization, which accuses the junta of using forced labor.
Early this month the government announced that junta leader Snr-Gen Than Shwe was willing to meet with Suu Kyi—but only if she met certain conditions, like renouncing support for foreign countries' economic sanctions against the military regime.
Than Shwe has only met Suu Kyi once before, in 2002.