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Myanmar's Suu Kyi defends slow-moving peace process
By Hla-Hla HTAY
Naypyidaw, Myanmar (AFP) May 24, 2017


Peace activists among 250 Myanmar prisoners granted pardon
Mandalay, Myanmar (AFP) May 24, 2017 - Myanmar granted amnesty to more than 250 prisoners ahead of peace talks being held Wednesday with ethnic rebel groups, including two activists sentenced to hard labour for their work promoting interfaith peace.

The president's office announced late Tuesday it would release 186 Myanmar nationals and 73 foreigners as a gesture of goodwill.

Among them were activists Zaw Zaw Latt and Pwint Phyu Latt, who were detained in 2015 after they travelled to the headquarters of the Kachin Independence Army to deliver a Christian cross and a statue of Buddha as symbols of peace.

Last year they were jailed for two years with hard labour in a case that human rights activists slammed as politically motivated and pandering to a hate campaign by Buddhist nationalists.

They were among some 40 political prisoners, land activists, student activists and farmers greeted by jubilant well-wishers as they walked out of prison in Mandalay on Wednesday morning.

"I am very happy (but) they should not have been in prison in the first place," said Harry Myo Lin, director of human rights advocacy group The Seagull, who went down to meet them.

Myanmar has released more than a thousand prisoners since the former junta ceded power to a quasi-civilian government in 2011.

Hundreds were pardoned shortly after Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government took over in 2016 after winning the first free elections in generations.

The veteran democracy activist spent more than 15 years under house arrest ordered by the then-military junta, and her party is stacked with former political prisoners jailed for their activism.

But the initial wave of releases has ebbed and a surge in prosecutions under a controversial online defamation law has raised concerns about lingering curbs on free expression.

Around 100 people are still being held as political prisoners, while more than 200 are awaiting trial for political crimes, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners watchdog.

Harry Myo Lin said the civilian government's hands were tied by the military, which still controls key levers of power under a junta-era constitution.

"One of the difficulties almost all the time here is the government doesn't have control of the home ministry," he told AFP.

"Also, the judiciary is not as independent as it should be."

Peace talks got underway in Myanmar on Wednesday, with de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi defending her government's stuttering attempts to end decades of fighting between the military and ethnic rebel groups.

A sea of colour filled the vast conference hall in the capital Naypyidaw as ethnic delegates in traditional costumes mingled with stony-faced military officers in full regalia.

The country has been scarred by some of the world's longest-running civil wars as various ethnic groups have fought Myanmar's military for greater autonomy.

Suu Kyi sought to dismiss criticism that little progress has been made on her flagship peace policy, more than a year after her party took power.

"Our collective efforts have started to bear fruit," she told the conference, according to an official translation of the speech.

"We have now reached the stage where we are able to discuss the basic federal principles that are so important for our country and our people."

Hopes had been high that Myanmar's first freely elected government for generations would end the running conflicts that have claimed thousands of lives and kept the country mired in poverty.

But many ethnic groups say Suu Kyi has not listened to their concerns and is working too closely with the military, which ruled the country with an iron fist for almost half a century.

This week's gathering is the second round of peace talks since Suu Kyi's civilian government came to power.

No rebels are expected to sign up to the National Ceasefire Agreement which she is pushing during the conference -- a controversial deal first touted by the previous military-backed government.

But the agenda will cover what shape a federal union might take, and is expected to include the first discussions on whether states will be able to draft their own constitutions.

Allowing states to write their own charters would be an "historic milestone in the post-colonial history of Myanmar," said Angshuman Choudhury from the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, adding it could "appease powerful ethnic constituencies and... prevent outright secessionism".

- Ongoing clashes -

Violence in Myanmar's northeast has reached its worst point since the conflict-ridden 1980s.

Tens of thousands of people have been forced to flee months of heavy fighting between the army and insurgent groups, many of them crossing into neighbouring China, which has sent delegates to the talks.

"We are hoping to be able to hold political discussions and talk directly about stopping the fighting and offensives by the Myanmar military," Major Tar Pan La from the the Ta'ang National Liberation Army told AFP.

The violence has destroyed much of the fragile trust that minority voters placed in Suu Kyi in the 2015 vote, and her National League for Democracy suffered several losses in recent by-elections.

It has also strengthened the hand of the China-backed United Wa States Army (UWSA), Myanmar's biggest ethnic armed group and one of the world's top drug traffickers.

The 25,000-strong militia has brought together several groups still locked in combat with the military into a new negotiating bloc that is refusing to sign up to the government-backed ceasefire.

Representatives from all seven, including the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) and the Arakan Army (AA), touched down in Naypyidaw on Tuesday after weeks of fraught politicking.

"We are hoping for equality and trying especially to stop the fighting," Sam Lawt, a spokesperson from the UWSA, told AFP at the conference.

But in an apparent warning to any insurgents who are seeking too much autonomy, military commander-in-chief Min Aung Hlaing told the conference that "some ethnic groups are far beyond the federal system".

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