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To: Mannie who wrote (20192)6/10/2003 5:23:36 PM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Rangoon unfazed by threat of
sanctions

By Richard S. Ehrlich
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

BANGKOK — Burma is counting on its neighbors
China and India to blunt any new sanctions amid
attempts in the United States and Europe to punish the
nation for its detention of opposition leader Aung San
Suu Kyi.
Burma's leader, Gen. Than Shwe, and its foreign
minister, Win Aung, personally laid the groundwork for
cooperation with the governments and 2 billion people in
China and India.
Burma is wedged between the two giants and has a
coveted, ship-friendly coast along the Bay of Bengal —
stretching from Bangladesh to Thailand.
"There is no evidence we are worried about sanctions.
Not that we want them, but we are not afraid of them,
either because we have lived for 26 years on our own
before, and we have very good neighbors around us and
we can simply trade and exchange relations with our
close, good neighbors," said Kyaw Win, Burma's
ambassador to Britain.
"We have the two largest countries of the world on
either side, who are happily trading and exchanging all
kinds of technical, transportation, security measures
[with Burma], and we are living in harmony with all of
them," the envoy told the British Broadcasting Corp. in
an interview.
A special U.N. envoy failed yesterday to meet Mrs.
Suu Kyi or secure her release, despite international
criticism and the threat of sanctions.
Envoy Razali Ismail, on the third day of his five-day
mission, said he was still pressing the generals who
moved Mrs. Suu Kyi to an unknown location after a
bloody clash in northern Burma nine days ago.
"I am still in the process of making my case," Mr.
Razali said.
China is Burma's closest ally.
Much of northern Burma, in and around Mandalay,
allows Chinese migrants to live and invest there while
using China's yuan currency instead of Burma's much
weaker kyat.
Gen. Shwe, in a rare trip abroad, spent six days in
China in January discussing Chinese financial and
military aid.
China arms and trains much of Burma's military. Burma depended on China for more
than 40 Chengdu F-7M and Nanchang A-5C warplanes before Russia sold MiG-29
fighters to Burma in 2001.
Burma and China also share a similar strategy in dealing with dissent. Both hung
tough after unleashing bloody military crackdowns that mirrored each other almost one
year apart: Beijing's infamous June 4, 1989, Tiananmen Square massacre was
preceded by Rangoon's Aug. 8, 1988, pro-Suu Kyi demonstrations.
Exploiting New Delhi's rivalry with China, Burma spent the past few years cozying up
to India.
India had been eyeing construction of a modern highway linking mountainous
Nagaland to Burma's Mandalay and Rangoon and on to Thailand's prosperous capital,
Bangkok.
washtimes.com