Thursday, 1 December 2011

ႏို၀င္ဘာ ၃၀ ကခ်င္းေဒသ တုိက္ပြဲ

ႏို၀င္ဘာ ၃၀ ညေနပိုင္း ၃နာရီခဲြေလာက္ မွာ ကခ်င္ျပည္နယ္ အေျခစိုက္ ေျခလ်င္တပ္ရင္း ၁၄၁ တပ္ရင္းမွဴး ဒုမွဴးႀကီး စိုးသူရ ဦးေဆာင္ေသာ အင္အား(၁၀၀) ေလာက္ဟာ ေပၚတာ အေယာက္ (၅၀) ေလာက္ စုေဆာင္းၿပီး ခ်ီတက္လာစဥ္ ဆင္ဘို အနား မန္ကင္းေက်းရြာ မဆြမ္ရြန္းလမ္းမေပၚတြင္ KIA တပ္မဟာ(၂) လက္ေအာက္ခံ တပ္ရင္း (၅) မွ ရဲေဘာ္ မ်ားၿခံဳခိုတိုက္ခုိက္ခဲ့ၿပီး တိုက္ပဲြ အျပင္းအထန္ျဖစ္ခဲ့တယ္လို႔သိရတယ္.. ေပၚတာ ထဲက (၁၀) ေယာက္ေလာက္က ထြက္ ေျပးသြားတယ္လို႔လည္းသိရတယ္..

ႏို၀င္ဘာ ၃၀ မနက္ ၇နာရီေလာက္မွာ အစိုးရစစ္တပ္ ခမရ ၃၈၅ မွ အင္အား (၃၀) ၀န္းက်င္ ဟာ တာေလာရြာအျပန္ ဧရာ၀တီ ျမစ္ကူးဖို႔ စက္ေလွေစာင့္ေနခ်ိန္တြင္ KIA တပ္မဟာ(၂) လက္ေအာက္ခံ တပ္ရင္း (၁၁) မွ ရဲေဘာ္ေတြ မိုင္းဆင္ တိုက္ခိုက္ခဲ့တယ္လို႔သိရသည္။ တိုက္ခုိက္မူေၾကာင့္ အစိုးရစစ္သား ၄ဦးေသဆံုးၿပီး ၃ ဦး ဒဏ္ရာရရွိတယ္လို႔သိရတယ္။ ခမရ ၃၈၅ မွ လက္နက္ႀကီးျဖင့္ျပန္လည္ ပစ္ခတ္ရာ တာေလာေက်းရြာ ဘုန္းႀကီးေက်ာင္း၀င္းသို႔ လက္နက္ႀကီးထိၿပီး ဘုန္းႀကီးေက်ာင္း မီးေလာင္သြားတယ္လို႔ သိရသည္။ အစိုးရစစ္တပ္မွပစ္ခတ္မူေၾကာင့္ ရြာသား ၁ ဦး ေသဆံုးၿပီး ၆ ဦး ေလာက္ဒဏ္ရာရရွိသြားတယ္လို႔ သိရတယ္။

သံတမန္ က်င့္၀တ္ ကုိ ေစာ္ကားေနတဲ့ တမတ္သားဦးေဏွာက္မ်ား



စစ္သားစစ္ စစ္ ကို က်ေနာ္တို ့ ခ်စ္ပါတယ္။  ဒါေပမဲ့စစ္သားပ်က္ ေတြနိင္ငံေရးတက္လုပ္ျပီဆိုရင္ေတာ့
ကိုယို ့ကားယားအျမဲျဖစ္ေတာ့တာပဲ။  ဟီလာရီကလင္တန္လာတယ္။ သူဟာျမန္မာ ျပည္သူေတြအတြက္
လာျခင္းေကာင္းတဲ့ ဧည့္သည္ပါ။ ျမန္မာ ျပည္သူလူထုကို ကူညီဖို ့
လာခဲ့တယ္။ စီးပြားေရးရုတ္သိမ္းမႈေတြကို အျမန္ဆံုးလုပ္ရမဲ့အစား စစ္သားပ်က္ေတြ ဟီလာရီကို
ကိုယို့ကားယားလုပ္လႊတ္ခဲ့တယ္လို ့ အေမရီကန္ သံတမန္ သတင္းရပ္ကတြက္ ဆိုလိုပါတယ္။
တနည္းအားျဖင့္ သူတို ့အေမရိကန္ တည္းဟူေသာ ကမၻာ့ပုလိပ္ၾကီးကို နားရြက္ တံေတြးစြပ္လိုက္ၾကပါတယ္။

ႏွစ္ႏုိင္ငံ ဆက္ဆံေရး တုိးတက္ဖုိ႔ အေမရိကန္ ႏုိင္ငံၿခားေရး ၀န္ၾကီး ဟီလာရီ ကလင္တန္ ၿမန္မာႏုိင္ငံ ကုိ လာတယ္။ အေမရိကန္ ႏုိင္ငံ ရဲ႕ ႏုိင္ငံၿခားေရး ေပၚလစီ အရ ၿမန္မာႏုိင္ငံ ကုိ ဒီမုိကေရလမ္းေၾကာင္း ကုိ ဦးတည္ေလွ်ာက္လွမ္းဖုိ႔ လုိလားတယ္။ တနည္းအားၿဖင့္ ဒီ အခ်ိန္ဟာ ႏွစ္ႏုိင္ငံဆက္ဆံေရး အတြက္ အင္မတန္ မွ အေရးၾကီးတဲ့အခ်ိန္ၿဖစ္တယ္။

ဒါေပမဲ့ သိန္းစိန္ စစ္အစုိးရ က ေတာ့ ထုံးစံအတုိင္း အင္မတန္မွ ေအာက္တန္းက်လွတဲ့ စစ္သားႏုိင္ငံေရး လုပ္ေနတုန္းပဲ လုိ႔ ႏုိင္ငံတကာ သံတမန္ အသုိင္းအ၀ုိင္းေတြ ကေၿပာေနၾကၿပီ။

အခ်က္အားၿဖင့္ - ၄ ခ်က္ကို အေမရိကန္ ေတြ မေၾကလည္ဘူးလို ့ဆိုတယ္။ ဒါေတြကေတာ့-

  • မင္းေအာင္လႈိင္ ကုိ တရုတ္ၿပည္ကုိေရွာင္ခိုင္းထားတာ။
  • ၾကပ္ေၿပး ေလဆိပ္နဲဲ႔ လမ္းေတြေပၚမွာေတာ့  ဘီလားရွစ္-Belarus ဝန္ႀကီးခ်ဳပ္ကို ႀကိဳဆိုပါတယ္ဆိုတဲ့ ပုံစံ ကုိ ၿပထားတယ္။     
  • ကမၻာ့ အင္အားၾကီးႏုိင္ငံ က ႏုိင္ငံၿခားေရး၀န္ၾကီး အဆင့္ လာေရာက္မႈ ကုိ ဒု ၀န္ၾကီးအဆင့္ ရွိတဲ့ သူ ကုိ သြားၾကိဳခုိင္းတယ္။
  •  ၾကပ္ေျပးကားလမ္းေတြမွာ ကားေတြ လူေတြ တေယာက္မွမရိွေအာင္ရွင္းထားတာကိုသူတို ့ကို စိုးရိမ္လာေစတယ္။  ပံုမွန္စည္ကားေနတဲ့ျမို ့တခုအျဖစ္မဟုတ္ပဲ စစ္ျဖစ္ေတာ့မဲ့ျမိဳ ့လိုျဖစ္ေနတာ။ သက္ေတာင့္သက္သာမရိွဘူးလို ့ဆိုတယ္။  
  • ဟီလာရီ လာတဲ့သတင္းကို သတင္းစာ ေရွ ့မ်က္ႏွာဖံုး မွာမေဖၚျပပဲ အတြင္းထဲမွာ အေရးမပါတဲ့သတင္းလိုလုပ္ထားပါတယ္။
 ဒီလုိ ၿမန္မာ စစ္ဗုိလ္ခ်ဳပ္ၾကီးေတြ ဆုိသူေတြရဲ႕ ေအာက္တန္းက်တဲ့ စစ္သားႏုိင္ငံေရးဟာ သံတမန္ က်င့္၀တ္ေတြ ကုိ မထိေလးစားၿပဳလုပ္ လုိက္တဲ့ အခ်က္ေတြဆုိတာ ႏုိင္ငံတကာ သံတမန္ အသုိင္းအ၀န္း အားလုံးက သတိၿပဳမိတယ္။ ဒါေၾကာင့္ဟီလာရီကလင္တန္ က ေလယ်ဥ္ပ်ံေပၚက ခ်က္ျခင္းမဆင္းေသးပဲ
၁၀မိနစ္ခန္ ့ ေနာက္က်မွာဆင္းလာတယ္။ ေအာက္ကေစာင့္ေနတဲ့ ျမန္မာ ဖက္က တာ၀န္ရိွသူေတြဟာ
စိုးရိမ္လာၾကတယ္လို ့ အတြင္းက ေပးပို ့လာတဲ့သတင္းေတြအရဆိုတယ္။ 



အေမရိကန္ အစုိးရ ကလည္း မစခင္ကတည္း က သိန္းစိန္ရဲ႕ တမတ္သား အစုိးရ ဟာ ဘယ္ေၿခလွမ္း လွမ္းေနတယ္ဆုိတာ သတိၿပဳမိ တယ္။

ဒီလုိ ၿမန္မာႏုိ္င္ငံ အတြက္ အေရးၾကီးလွတဲ့ အခ်ိန္မွာ ဒီလုပ္ရပ္ေတြ ကုိ ဘယ္သူ က ညႊန္ၾကားခဲ့သလဲ၊ ဘယ္အုပ္စု က စနစ္တက် လုပ္ခဲ့သလဲဆုိတာ က ၿမန္မာၿပည္သူေတြ အားလုံးက ေမးေနၾကတဲ့ ေမးခြန္းေတြပါ။ 

တခ်ိဳ႔ ၀ါရင့္ သံတမန္ ေတြ ကေတာ့ စစ္သား က ႏုိင္ငံေရးလုပ္ေတာ့ Diplomatic protocol  ကုိ နားမလည္ဘူး ေပါ့ဗ်ာ လုိ႔ ေ၀ဖန္ထားၾကတယ္။      

အေမရိကန္ ႏုိင္ငံၿခားေရး ၀န္ၾကီး ဟီလာရီ ကေတာ့  ၿမန္မာ စစ္ဗုိလ္ခ်ဳပ္ၾကီး ဆုိသူေတြကုိ သင္တုိ႔ ဘယ္လမ္း သြားမလဲ  ဆုိတာ သံတမန္ နည္းလမ္း ကေန လူကုိယ္တုိင္ လာ သတိေပးေနတာပါ။

U.S. Will Ease Some Limits on Myanmar, Clinton Says

December 1, 2011

U.S. Will Ease Some Limits on Myanmar, Clinton Says

YANGON, Myanmar — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said on Thursday that the United States would loosen some restrictions on international financial assistance and development programs in Myanmar, in response to a nascent political and economic opening in the country.
The United States and Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, also agreed to discuss upgrading diplomatic relations — which were suspended for two decades — and exchanging ambassadors, a step that could transform American diplomacy in Southeast Asia.
Mrs. Clinton met the country’s new president, U Thein Sein, on Thursday morning and its main opposition leader, the Nobel peace laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, later in the day, underscoring the Obama administration’s cautious efforts to nurture a thaw in one of the world’s most isolated and repressive nations. In each meeting, Mrs. Clinton delivered a letter from President Obama, expressing support for the democratization of Myanmar.
“For decades, the choices of this country’s leaders kept it apart from the global economy and the community of nations,” Mrs. Clinton said after meeting Mr. Thein Sein in Naypyidaw, Myanmar’s remote new capital. “Today, the United States is prepared to respond to reforms with measured steps to lessen its isolation and improve the lives of citizens.”
Mrs. Clinton met Mr. Thein Sein at the monumental presidential palace, erected along with the rest of the city only six years ago on what had been an obscure stretch of farmland about 200 miles north of Yangon, the country’s largest city. Mr. Thein Sein, a former general and prime minister in the previous military government, greeted Mrs. Clinton cordially, calling her visit as “a historic milestone” that he hoped would “open a new chapter in relations.”
Where that new chapter will lead depends on whether Mr. Thein Sein’s government takes additional steps to open up the country’s politics, release political prisoners and end the violent repression of minority ethnic groups in some of the world’s longest civil conflicts.
A senior Obama administration official said late Thursday that there was not yet any specific timetable for actions by either country, and that a full restoration of diplomatic relations appeared to be months away, at a minimum.
In her meetings and public statements, Mrs. Clinton said she raised a number of issues that have divided the United States and Myanmar since 1990, when the ruling military junta refused to acknowledge the results of elections won by Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi’s party, the National League for Democracy. Mrs. Clinton also called on Myanmar to “sever illicit ties to North Korea” that officials say has included work on ballistic missiles and, possibly, nuclear technology.
Even so, she sought to welcome and encourage the steps taken since Mr. Thein Sein became president in March, including lifting the ban on the National League for Democracy.
“It is also encouraging that Aung San Suu Kyi is now free to take part in the political process,” she said, “but that too will be insufficient unless all political parties can open offices throughout the country and compete in free, fair and credible elections.”
In a video conference with the Council on Foreign Relations in New York on Wednesday, Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi acknowledged that her re-entry into the political process — like the American engagement — entailed risk.
She said that she trusted Mr. Thein Sein personally. But she added, “I cannot say that everybody in the government feels as he does.”
Asked if she agreed with that view, Mrs. Clinton demurred, though she said she understood that there were a variety of views within the government.
In two and a half hours of meetings with Mrs. Clinton, Mr. Thein Sein offered important signals of his intentions, senior administration officials said. He discussed legal steps for releasing additional political prisoners, for example, despite his recent public remarks asserting that the country did not have any.
There was little fanfare in the capital for Mrs. Clinton’s visit, the first by a secretary of state since 1955, and the broad boulevards her motorcade passed through were all but deserted.
The government newspaper, The New Light of Myanmar, reported Mrs. Clinton’s visit in a two-paragraph article on Page 2, while printing on its front page the entire résumé of the prime minister of Belarus, who arrived for a visit on Thursday.
In the far more bustling metropolis of Yangon, Mrs. Clinton toured the ancient golden Shwedagon Pagoda, one of the most sacred Buddhist shrines in the country. Visitors there applauded on two occasions as a guide led her through the site, where she took part in rituals like the ringing of a giant bell and pouring water 11 times over a statue of Buddha.
She then met privately with Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi over dinner at the lakeside residence of the senior American diplomat in Myanmar. It was their first meeting, though they had previously spoken by telephone, and the two women greeted each other warmly. Mrs. Clinton recalled a signed poster from a women’s conference in Beijing when she was first lady, which Madeleine K. Albright, the secretary of state at the time, sent to Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi. She responded that the poster remained on the wall of one of her offices. “I am very happy to meet you, finally,” Mrs. Clinton said.
The steps Mrs. Clinton announced on Thursday were modest in scale but important symbolically. While the United States is not yet considering lifting the sweeping sanctions that ban most imports from Myanmar, she said, Washington will no longer block the World Bank and International Monetary Fund from carrying out assessment programs, and will support the expansion of United Nations development grants for health care and small businesses in Myanmar.
She also invited Myanmar to join the Lower Mekong Initiative, an American-sponsored regional association devoted to water issues, which already includes Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Thailand. And she said she raised the possibility of joint missions to recover the remains of about 600 American soldiers who died in the country during World War II, similar to the effort to locate missing Americans in Vietnam.
“So we’re not at the point yet that we can consider lifting sanctions that we have in place, because of our ongoing concerns about policies that have to be reversed,” Mrs. Clinton said. “But any steps that the government takes will be carefully considered and will be, as I said, matched, because we want to see political and economic reform take hold.”

အမတ္သတင္း

ျပည္ေထာင္စုဒီမိုကေရစီပါတီ တည္ေထာင္သူ ျဖိဳးမင္းသိန္း အပါအ၀င္ အျခားလူငယ္မ်ား NLD တြင္လႊတ္ေတာ္အမတ္အျဖစ္ အေရြးခံရဖြယ္ရွိ

by Myanmar Mediamm on Thursday, December 1, 2011 at 2:17pm

ျပည္ေထာင္စုဒီမိုကေရစီပါတီကို တည္ေထာင္ခဲ့ျပီးေရြးေကာက္ပြဲ၀င္ေရာက္ယွဥ္ျပိဳင္ခဲ့ေသာ ျဖိဳးမင္းသိန္းအပါအ၀င္ တိုးေက်ာ္လိႈင္၊မ်ိဳးရန္ေနာင္သိန္း စသည့္ ျပင္ပလူငယ္မ်ားသည္ ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္လြတ္ေျမာက္လာခဲ့ျပီးေနာက္ပိုင္းတြင္ အမ်ိဳးသားဒီမိုကေရစီအဖြဲ႕၏ လူမႈေရးလုပ္ငန္းမ်ား ၊ ကြန္ယက္အဖြဲ ့မ်ား စည္တို ့တြင္ ၀င္ေရာက္ပူးေပါင္းလုပ္ကိုင္လာၾကျပီး လာမည့္ ၾကားျဖတ္ေရြးေကာက္ပြဲတြင္ အသစ္ျပန္လည္ဖြဲ ့စည္းကာ ၀င္ေရာက္ယွဥ္ျပိဳင္မည့္ အမ်ိဳးသားဒီမိုကေရစီအဖြဲ ့ခ်ဳပ္၏ လူငယ္လႊတ္ေတာ္အမတ္မ်ားေနရာတြင္ ၀င္ေရာက္ေရြးခ်ယ္ခံရဖြယ္ရွိေနသည္ဟု အဖြဲ ့ခ်ဳပ္ႏွင့္နီးစပ္သူမ်ားထံမွသတင္းမ်ားထြက္ေပၚလွ်က္ရွိေနပါသည္ ။ သိူ ့ေသာ္ ယခုခ်ိန္ထိ အဖြဲ ့ခ်ဳပ္မွ ကိုယ္စားလွယ္ေလာင္းစာရင္းကို တရား၀င္ထုတ္ျပန္ျခင္းမရွိေသးဟု သိရပါသည္။

ကလင္တန္ ၊ ေဒၚစုနဲ ့ေတြ ့

ဟီလာရီကလင္တန္နဲ ့ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ေတြ ့ဆံု 
နိင္ငံေရးအက်ဥ္းသားေတြလႊတ္ေပးဖို ့၊ ျပည္တြင္းစစ္ရပ္စဲဖို ့ နဲ ့ေျမက္ကိုရီးယား နဲ ့မဆက္ဆံဖို ့ကိစၥေတြ ဦးသိန္းစိန္ အစိုးရကိုေဆြးေႏြးခဲ့တယ္။  စီးပြားေရးပိတ္စို ့မႈ ကိုဆက္လက္ထားရိွမွာ
ျဖစ္တယ္။

ဒီခ်ဳပ္သတင္း

ေရြးေကာက္ပြဲ၀င္ခဲ့ေသာပါတီ၀င္မ်ားအျဖစ္မွ ႏႈတ္ထြက္ျပီး အမ်ိဳးသားဒီမိုကေရစီပါတီ၀င္အျဖစ္ျပန္လည္ေလွ်ာက္ထားရန္ျပင္ဆင္

by Myanmar Mediamm on Thursday, December 1, 2011 at 11:24am
ေရြးေကာက္ပြဲ၀င္ခဲ့ေသာပါတီမ်ားတြင္ အဖြဲ႔၀င္အျဖစ္ပါ၀င္လႈပ္ရွားေနၾကေသာ အဖြဲ ့၀င္အမ်ားစုသည္ ယခုၾကားျဖတ္ေရြးေကာက္ပြဲတြင္ NLD အေနျဖင့္ တရား၀င္ ျပန္လည္မွတ္ပံုတင္ကာလြတ္လပ္ေသာ ေနရာမ်ားတြင္ျပန္လည္အေရြးခ်ယ္ခံမည္ဟူေသာ သတင္းမ်ားေၾကာင့္ အဆိုပါ ေနရာေဒသအသီးသီးရွိ  ၾကံံ့ခိုင္ေရးပါတီ , NDF အစရွိသည့္ပါတီမ်ားမွ ေအာက္ေျခပါတီ၀င္မ်ားအေနျဖင့္စုေပါင္းႏႈတ္ထြက္ကာ ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ေခါင္းေဆာင္ပါ၀င္ျပီး  ၉၀ ျပည့္ႏွစ္ ေရြးေကာက္ပြဲအႏိုင္ရပါတီတခုျဖစ္ေသာ အမ်ိဳးသားဒီမိုကေရစီအဖြဲ ့ခ်ဳပ္အဖြဲ႔ အသစ္မ်ားအျဖစ္ ျပန္လည္ေလွ်ာက္လႊာ တင္သြင္းရန္ေစာင့္စားေနၾကေၾကာင္းသိရပါသည္ ။ ယခုကဲ့သို ့ သတင္းမ်ားထြက္ေပၚလာခ်ိန္တြင္ ၾကံ႔ခိုင္ေရး ပါတီအေနျဖင့္ ပါတီ၀င္မ်ား အားေခ်းေငြမ်ား အားတိုးျမင့္ျပီး ပါတီ၀င္တဦးလွ်င္ ေငြက်ပ္တသိန္း အထိ ထုတ္ေခ်းမည္ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း သတင္းမ်ားထြက္ေပၚလာခဲ့သည္။ သို ့ ရာတြင္ လူအမ်ားစူမွာ ထိုသတင္းအားစိတ္ပါ၀င္စားမႈ မရွိပဲ NLD ပါတီ၀င္အျဖစ္ေလွ်ာက္ထားရန္ကို သာ စိတ္အားထက္သန္ေနၾကသည္ဟု သိရပါသည္။ သို ့ရာတြင္ ယခင္ပါတီမ်ားတြင္ ပါတီ၀င္မ်ားအျဖစ္ စည္းရံုးသိမ္းသြင္းခံခဲ့ရသူအဖြဲ႔၀င္မ်ားသည္ ယခုအခ်ိန္တြင္မိမိတို ့ ဆႏၵအေလွ်ာက္ အမ်ိဳးသားဒီမိုကေရစီအဖြဲ ့ခ်ဳပ္အဖြဲ ့၀င္အျဖစ္ ေလွ်ာက္ထားလိုေသာ္လည္း အဖြဲ ႔ခ်ဳပ္မွာပါတီ၀င္မ်ားအျဖစ္ လက္ခံမည္၊လက္မခံမည္ကို ေသခ်ာ မသိရွိရေသးသည့္အတြက္ စိုးရြ႔ံမႈမ်ားလည္းရွိေနသည္ဟုသိရပါသည္။

Press Availability in Nay Pyi Taw, Burma


Press Availability

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Nay Pyi Taw, Burma
December 1, 2011


SECRETARY CLINTON: Good afternoon, and – mingalaba, is that how you say it? Yeah? How?QUESTION: Mingalaba.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Mingalaba. Thank you.
Let me start by saying that I want to emphasize that while I may be the first United States Secretary of State to visit in over a half century, our two nations are far from strangers. We’ve had a long history together, from the earliest American missionaries to generations of traders and merchants to the shared sacrifices of World War Two. The United States was among the first to recognize this country’s independence, and we have welcomed the many contributions of Burmese Americans to our own culture and prosperity. And Americans from all walks of life are following closely the events here.
So I come with a great deal of interest and awareness of what is happening. And on behalf of my country and President Obama, I came to assess whether the time is right for a new chapter in our shared history. Today, I met with President Thein Sein, his foreign minister, other senior ministers, and the speakers and members of parliament in both houses. We had candid, productive conversations about the steps taken so far, and the path ahead for reform.
Tomorrow, I will be meeting with ethnic minority groups and civil society. I will be meeting tonight and tomorrow with Aung San Suu Kyi and other members of the political opposition.
President Thein Sein has taken the first steps toward a long-awaited opening. His government has eased some restrictions on the media and civil society, opened a dialogue with Aung San Suu Kyi, rewritten election and labor laws, and released 200 prisoners of conscience. The president told me he seeks to build on these steps, and I assured him that these reforms have our support. I also told him that while the measures already taken may be unprecedented and certainly welcome, they are just a beginning. It is encouraging that political prisoners have been released, but over a thousand are still not free. Let me say publicly what I said privately earlier today. No person in any country should be detained for exercising universal freedoms of expression, assembly, and conscience.
It is also encouraging that Aung San Suu Kyi is now free to take part in the political process. But that, too, will not be sufficient unless all political parties can open offices throughout the country and compete in free, fair, and credible elections. We welcome initial steps from the government to reduce ethnic tensions and hostilities. But as long as terrible violence continues in some of the world’s longest-running internal conflicts, it will be difficult to begin a new chapter.
This country’s diversity, its dozens of ethnic groups and languages, its shrines, pagodas, mosques, and churches should be a source of strength in the 21st century. And I urged the president to allow international humanitarian groups, human rights monitors and journalists access to conflict zones.
National reconciliation remains a defining challenge, and more needs to be done to address the root causes of conflict and to advance an inclusive dialogue that will finally bring peace to all of the people. We discussed these and many other challenges ahead, including the need to combat illegal trafficking in persons, weapons, and drugs. And I was very frank in stating that better relations with the United States will only be possible if the entire government respects the international consensus against the spread of nuclear weapons. We look to the government to fully implement UN Security Council Resolutions 1718 and 1874, and we support the government’s stated determination to sever military ties with North Korea.
In each of my meetings, leaders assured me that progress would continue and broaden. And as it does, the United States will actively support those, both inside and outside of government, who genuinely seek reform. For decades, the choices of this country’s leaders kept it apart from the global economy and the community of nations. Today, the United States is prepared to respond to reforms with measured steps to lessen the isolation and to help improve the lives of its citizens. That includes an invitation to join neighboring countries as an observer in the Lower Mekong Initiative. We have agreed to IMF and World Bank assessment missions to begin studying the needs on the ground for development, particularly in rural areas, and poverty reduction.
We discussed loosening restrictions on UNDP health and microfinance programs, pursuing education and training efforts, and resuming joint counter-narcotics missions. And just as the search for missing Americans once helped us repair relations with Vietnam, today we spoke about a new joint effort to recover the remains of hundreds of Americans lost here during World War II during the building of the Burma Road.
These are beginning steps, and we are prepared to go even further if reforms maintain momentum. In that spirit, we are discussing what it will take to upgrade diplomatic relations and exchange ambassadors. Over time, this could become an important channel to air concerns, monitor and support progress, and build trust on both sides.
The last time an American Secretary of State came to Burma, it was John Foster Dulles, and this country was considered the jewel of Asia, a center of higher learning and the rice bowl of the region. In the last half century, other countries have raced ahead and turned East Asia into one of the world’s great centers of dynamic growth and opportunity. So the most consequential question facing this country, both leaders and citizens, is not your relationship with the United States or with any other nation. It is whether leaders will let their people live up to their God-given potential and claim their place at the heart of the 21st century, a Pacific century.
There is no guarantee how that question will be answered. If the question is not answered in a positive way, then once again, the people could be left behind. But if it is answered in a positive way, I think the potential is unlimited.
I’m told there is an old Burmese proverb which says, “When it rains, collect water.” Well, we don’t know yet if the path to democracy is irreversible, as one of the leaders told me today, if the opening of the economy will be considered a positive and moved quickly to achieve. So the question is not for me to answer. The question is for all of you, particularly leaders, to answer. But we owe it to nearly 60 million people who seek freedom, dignity, and opportunity to do all we can to make sure that question is answered positively.
President Obama spoke of flickers of progress. Well, we know from history that flickers can die out. They can even be stamped out. Or they can be ignited. It will be up to the leaders and the people to fan those flickers of progress into flames of freedom that light the path toward a better future. That and nothing less is what it will take for us to turn a solitary visit into a lasting partnership. As I told President Thein Sein earlier today, the United States is prepared to walk the path of reform with you if you choose to keep moving in that direction. And there’s no doubt that direction is the right one for the people.
I’ll be happy to take some questions.
MS. NULAND: We have time for four questions today. I guess the first one is The New York Times, Steve Myers.
QUESTION: Thanks, Toria. Madam Secretary, thank you. Sorry. Thank you, Madam Secretary. The – Aung San Suu Kyi yesterday said that she personally trusted the president but wasn’t sure about the views of others in the government. After your meetings today, do you share that view?
And in your discussions today, did you talk about a timetable for some of the reciprocal steps from both countries that you would like to see? Is this a matter of months or years? Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, Steve, we had a very substantive, serious, and candid, long discussion, both in the formal setting and then over lunch, between myself and President Thein Sein. He laid out a comprehensive vision of reform, reconciliation, and economic development for his country, including specifics such as the release of political prisoners, an inclusive political process, and free, fair, and credible bi-elections, a rigorous peace and reconciliation process to bring to an end some of the longest-standing conflicts anywhere in the world, and strong assurances regarding his country’s compliance with United Nations Security Council Resolutions 1718 and 1874, and their nonproliferation commitments with respect to North Korea.
I made it clear that he and those who support that vision which he laid out for me, both inside and outside of government, will have our support as they continue to make progress, and that the United States is willing to match actions with actions. We want to be a partner in this reform process, starting with the steps that I laid out today. I also told him that, based on my experience and my observation, I am well aware that he has people in his government who are very supportive of this reform agenda, and he has people who are worried about it or opposed to it, and he has people in the middle who are sitting on the fence, trying to make up their minds. What I hope is that our strong commitment, coupled with the willingness of the international community – particularly multinational organizations from the UN to the IMF to the World Bank and others – expressing our strong support for this path. And what it will mean in terms of delivering concrete benefits will give him extra support in the internal debates that are underway.
So I certainly believe that we now have a clear sense of what he is trying to achieve and how best we can support him. And let me add that, in my meetings with the foreign minister and the speakers of both the upper and the lower house, I heard the same things about the issues that had to be addressed in order for reform to continue. I wasn’t given specific dates, but I was certainly assured that actions would be taken on a regular and ongoing basis.
MS. NULAND: Next question, from Shwe Gin Maru (ph) of Myanmar Times.
QUESTION: Thank you, Madam. I would like to know, do you think (inaudible) reaching with the new Government of Myanmar, and (inaudible)?
SECRETARY CLINTON: I thought that today was an excellent opportunity for me to both listen to officials in the government describe what their intentions are and the actions that they are planning to take and for them to hear from me on behalf of the United States how much we support this path of reform, how we expect to see additional steps taken on political prisoners, on peace and reconciliation, on the bi-elections, on the enforcement of the laws that have been passed, which are quite encouraging but need to be implemented. And I will certainly emphasize that if what I heard today is followed through on by the government, that meets the concerns that we have as to whether or not this is a serious and sincere effort. And we hope that it is.
MS. NULAND: Next question, Keith Johnson, Wall Street Journal.
QUESTION: Madam Secretary, thank you. China’s response to your visit and the U.S. reengagement in general has been one of concern. And in fact, they’ve spoken openly about a competition between the U.S. and China for inputs in Myanmar. Their state media just today warned that they will not accept their interests being stamped on here. And I wondered, just briefly, two things. Do you fear that U.S. reengagement could cause any sort of backlash with Beijing? And more broadly, countries like Myanmar in the region, what can the U.S. do to assuage countries like that? They’re sort of caught between these two titans of the new Pacific century.
SECRETARY CLINTON: That’s an important question, and it’s one that I addressed in all of my discussions. Our engagement here is rooted in our longstanding interest in seeking positive change. We have, as I said at the very beginning, a long history that has many positive aspects to it. But we have been dismayed by some of the actions of the past decades, and we are encouraged to see the changes that are taking place.
This is an interest that spans decades, that cuts across every political divide in the United States, because it’s a country that has both fascinated and worried Americans for many years. And we are not about opposing any other country; we’re about supporting this country. And we actually consult regularly with China about our engagements in the Asia Pacific region, including how we see events unfolding here. And we welcome – as I specifically told the president and the two speakers, we welcome positive, constructive relations between China and her neighbors. We think that’s in China’s interest as well as the neighborhood’s interest. We think that being friends with one doesn’t mean not being friends with others. So from our perspective, we are not viewing this in light of any competition with China. We’re viewing this on its merits as an opportunity for us to reengage here. And we think that that is a very open possibility. And that’s why I’m here to assess it for myself.
MS. NULAND: And the last question today, Fine Kin Zin Lay (ph) from The Voice.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) asking two questions. One question is: Do you see any probability for release all political prisoners? And the second question is: Did you discuss about sanctions with the president? Are there any probability to ease sanction, or never? Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: We discussed both of those issues at some length because, obviously, they are important subjects in our renewed dialogue.
With respect to political prisoners, we believe that any political prisoner anywhere should be released. One political prisoner is one too many, in our view. And we’re concerned about the continued detention of more than a thousand prisoners of conscience here. We welcome the release of the 200 political prisoners in October, and we have consistently called for and encouraged the release of all political prisoners. I did so again. And I made it clear that was an issue that would have to be resolved before we could take some of the steps that we would be willing to take because the immediate and unconditional release of all political prisoners is a key test of the government’s commitment to human rights and democracy and internal national reconciliation.
So we’re aware of the process that is followed and the constitutional provision that gives authority to the president. We know that for the release in October, the parliament agreed to support that. So I discussed it with the president and both speakers, and we are certainly hopeful that we will see such release of all prisoners in the near future.
With regard to sanctions, we’re in the early stages of our dialogue. And I want to state for the record that my visit today is the result of over two years of work on our behalf. We’ve had at least 20 high-level visits. We have Assistant Secretary Campbell, our former representative Scott Marciel. We’ve had a very active engagement by our chargé, and then we filled the position that the Congress created for a permanent special representative with Ambassador Derek Mitchell.
So for more than two years, ever since I asked that we do a review of our Burma policy in 2009, we have been reaching out, we’ve been trying to gather information, because we wanted to see change for the benefit of all of the people. And so we have been working toward this, and the reason that we were finally able to reach the decision that the president announced for me to visit is because of the steps that the government has taken.
We know more needs to be done, however, and we think that we have to wait to make sure that this commitment is real. So we’re not only talking to senior members of the government, but we’re talking to civil society members, we’re talking to members of the political opposition, we’re talking to representatives of ethnic minorities, because we want to be sure that we have as full a picture as possible.
So we’re not at the point yet that we can consider lifting sanctions that we have in place because of our ongoing concerns about policies that have to be reversed. But any steps that the government takes will be carefully considered and will be, as I said, matched because we want to see political and economic reform take hold. And I told the leadership that we will certainly consider the easing and elimination of sanctions as we go forward in this process together. And it has to be not theoretical or rhetorical. It has to be very real, on the ground, that can be evaluated. But we are open to that, and we are going to pursue many different avenues to demonstrate our continuing support for this path of reform.
MS. NULAND: Thank you very much.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thanks, everyone. Thank you all very much. Wonderful to have a chance to talk to you.
# # #


PRN: 2011/T56-05


Can Clinton, Suu Kyi change Burma?


Wednesday, 30 November 2011 12:46 May Ng


(Commentary) – As the first U.S. secretary of state to visit Burma in 56 years, Hillary Clinton’s trip marks a turning point, and there is high expectation that Burma may finally be coming out of the cold.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks during the Special Session on Gender at the Fourth High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in Korea on November 30, 2011.  Photo: AFP
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks during the Special Session on Gender at the Fourth High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in Korea on November 30, 2011. Photo: AFP
Soon after its independence from Britain, British travel writer Norman Lewis wrote in the early 1950s that in comparison to Vietnam, Burma had remained isolated and mysterious.  He wrote that “while in Vietnam the established authority was challenged by a united opposition with a single ideology, the Burmese government was opposed by two separate bands of communists, two versions of a heterogeneous organization called the People’s Voluntary Organization, in which many bandits had enrolled, 10,000 or so Seven Day Adventist Karens, and a small army of mutinous military police.”

Even today, while resisting the central government’s ethnocentric nationalism and chauvinism for decades, Burma’s various opposition groups, while they share a common goal for democracy, have never unified under a common leadership or set of principles.

Following the Saffron Revolution of 2007, the Burmese military regime was viewed negatively by the world at-large. With the fresh memory of monks’ blood on their hands, it could no longer use the blunt force of violence against Aung San Suu Kyi, as it did during the 2003 Depayin Massacre. The army finally released Suu Kyi from house arrest in 2010, but it has continued its brutal assaults on ethnic minorities in conflict areas. However, simultaneously, the new government began a concerted charm offensive on all fronts, including it pursuit of separate cease-fires with armed ethnic groups.

The military’s rapid warming up to Suu Kyi and the NLD caught many in the political opposition camp by surprise. There was no time to openly discuss or mull over the political choices made by Suu Kyi, but people trusted her instincts. However, some political factions still remain far apart in areas throughout the country.

Looking back to 1886, James George Scott wrote, “Large trading towns of Burma will be for all practical purposes absorbed by the Chinese traders, just as in Singapore... And Burma is a country that has never known, and can never know, famine except as a direct result of civil war and misrule. It is perhaps a pity that the Burmese have not more vigor about them, but, on the other hand, it would be a pity if so simple and contented and genial a people were to be spoilt by a new and sordid desire for the acquisition of wealth.”

Burma and China seemed so utterly different then, but since the 1988 crackdown in Burma and the 1989 uprising in China, the two countries have become key political and economic allies. The question is whether the United States can now move Burma from its deep embrace of China?





To be continued

အေမရိကန္ ႏိုင္ငံျခားေရး ၀န္ႀကီး ဟီလာရီ ကလင္တန္ ျမန္မာ သမၼတ ဦးသိန္းစိန္ႏွင့္ ေတြ ့ဆုံ

၁-၁၂-၂၀၁၁
ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံသို ့ အေမရိကန္အစိုးရ အဆင့္ၿမင့္ထိပ္တန္း ႏိုင္ငံျခားေရး၀န္ၾကီး ေရာက္ရွိလာျခင္း
သည္ ၅၇ ႏွစ္အတြင္း ပထမဆုံးအၾကိမ္ျဖစ္ပါသည္။
ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံသို ့ ယမန္ေန ့( ႏို၀င္ဘာ ၃၀ ရက္)က ေရာက္ရွိလာေသာ အေမရိကန္ ႏိုင္ငံျခားေရး ၀န္ႀကီး ဟီလာရီ ကလင္တန္သည္
 ဒီကေန႔ ေန ့လည္ပိုင္းမွာ ေနျပည္ေတာ္ သမၼတ အိမ္ေတာ္မွာ သမၼတ ဦးသိန္းစိန္နဲ႔ ေတြ႔ဆံုခဲ့
ပါသည္။ထိုသို ့ေတြ ့ဆံုရာတြင္ၿမန္မာႏိုင္ငံၿခားေရး၀န္ႀကီးဦး၀ဏေမာင္လြင္၊ၿပည္သူ ့လႊတ္ေတာ္
ဥကၠဌသူရဦးေရႊမန္းႏွင့္ၿပည္ေထာင္စုလႊတ္ေတာ္နာယကဦးခင္ေအာင္ၿမင့္တို ့ႏွင့္အတူၿပည္ေထာင္စု၀န္ႀကီးအခ်ိဳ ့
တို ့လည္းပါ၀င္ခဲ့ပါသည္။
အေမရိကန္ ႏိုင္ငံျခားေရး၀န္ႀကီး ဟီလာရီ ကလင္တန္မွ သမၼတ ဦးသိန္းစိန္အား ဒီမိုကေရစီျပဳျပင္ေျပာင္းလဲေရးကိုျပဳလုပ္ရန္ႏွင့္ ႏိုင္ငံေရးအက်ဥ္းသားအာလုံးလြႊတ္ေပးရန္ ကခ်င္ေဒသ ထိုးစစ္မ်ားရပ္တန္ ့ရန္ႏွင့္ ႏိုင္ငံေရးတြင္ျပည္သူအားလုံးပါ၀င္ႏိုင္ရန္ ေတာင္းဆိုလိုက္သည္။
သမတ ဦးသိန္းစိန္မွ အေမရိကန္ ႏိုင္ငံျခားေရး ၀န္ႀကီး ဟီလာရီ ကလင္တန္အား ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံ
ဒီမိုးကေရစီျပဳျပင္ေျပာင္းလဲေရးတြင္ စီးပြားေရးပိတ္ဆို ့မႈမ်ား ဖြင့္ေပးရန္ေတာင္းဆိုသည္ဟု
သိရွိရသည္။
မနက္ၿဖန္ ဒီဇင္ဘာလ ၂ ရက္ေန ့တြင္ ျမန္မာ့ ဒီမုိကေရစီေခါင္းေဆာင္ ေဒၚေအာင္ဆန္းစုၾကည္ႏွင့္ အမ်ိဳးသား ဒီမုိကေရစီအဖြဲ႔ခ်ဳပ္ အဖြဲ႔၀င္မ်ားႏွင့္လည္ေကာင္း၊ တျခားေသာ ႏုိင္ငံေရးပါတီမ်ား၊ လူမႈအဖြဲ႔အစည္း
မ်ားႏွင့္ လည္းေကာင္းေတြ႔ဆုံမည္ျဖစ္သည္

ဦးသိန္းစိန္ ၊ ေငြစကၠဴစုတ္

ေဒၚ​ေအာင္ဆန္း​စုၾကည္ႏွင့္​ စီး​ပြား​ေရး​လုပ္ငန္း​ရွင္ ဦး​ေတဇ ​ေတြ႕​ဆံု


ျမန္မာစီး​ ပြား​ေရး​ လုပ္ငန္း​ရွင္​ေတြထဲမွာ စစ္အဏာရွင္​ေဟာင္း​ ဦး​သန္း​ေရႊရဲ့​ မိသား​စုနဲ့​ ရင္ႏွီး​က်ြမ္း​ဝင္သူလို့​ လူသိမ်ား​တဲ့​ စီး​ပြား​ေရး​လုပ္ငန္း​ရွင္ ဦး​ေတဇဟာ ဒီက​ေန့​ ​ေဒၚ​ေအာင္ဆန္း​စုၾကည္နဲ့​ တကၠသိုလ္ရိပ္သာလမ္း​ ​ေနအိမ္မွာ ​ေတြ႕​ဆံုခဲ့​တယ္လို့​ ​ေဒၚ​ေအာင္ဆန္း​စုၾကည္​ေနအိမ္နဲ့​ နီး​စပ္သူ​ေတြဆီက သိရပါတယ္။
ေတဇ
ဒီ​ေတြ႕​ ဆံုမႈနဲ့​ ပတ္သက္ၿပီး​ေတာ့​ အမ်ိဳး​သား​ဒီမိုက​ေရစီအဖြဲ့​ခ်ုပ္အ​ေနနဲ့​ တရား​ဝင္ အတည္ျပုခ်က္မ​ေပး​ပါဘူး​။ အ​ေမရိကန္နဲ့​ ဥ​ေရာပ နိုင္ငံ​ေတြက ဦး​ေတဇနဲ့​ သူရဲ့​ ကုမၸဏီျဖစ္တဲ့​ ထူး​ထ​ေရး​ဒင္း​နဲ့​ ဆက္စပ္ ကုမၸဏီ​ေတြကို စီး​ပြား​ပိတ္ဆို့​ ဒဏ္ခတ္ထား​ပါတယ္။
အ​ေမရိကန္ နိုင္ငံျခား​ဝန္ႀကီး​နဲ့​ ​ေဒၚ​ေအာင္ဆန္း​စုၾကည္နဲ့​ မ​ေတြ႕​ဆံုခင္ ရက္ပိုင္း​အလိုမွာ အခုလို့​ ဦး​ေတဇက ​ေဒၚ​ေအာင္ဆန္း​စုၾကည္ဆီ သြား​ေရာက္​ေတြ႕​ဆံုခဲ့​တာ ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။

ထြန္းျမင့္နိင္ ညာလက္ရံုး ဗီဇာရရိွ

ထြန္းျမင့္နိင္ ရဲ ့ေအးရွားေ၀ါလ္ ကုမဏီရဲ ့ဒါရိုက္တာ ဦးဖိုးခ်ိဳ ႏွင့္မိသားစု အေမရိကန္ ဗီဇာ ကိုရရိွပါတယ္။

ကလင္တန္ က ျမန္မာ ကို စိန္ေခၚ ဟု ေအပီက သံုစြဲ ထား

Clinton challenges Myanmar to expand reforms
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Thursday challenged the leaders of Myanmar to continue and expand upon recent reforms, calling for the release of all political prisoners, an end to violent campaigns against ethnic minorities and a breaking of military ties with North Korea.
သူခရီးစဥ္အဓိကရည္ရြယ္ခ်က္ကို ဒီအပုဒ္မွာေတြ ့ရတယ္။  ၃ ခ်က္ပါတယ္။ 
၁- နိင္ငံေရးအက်ဥ္းသားေတြလြတ္ေပး ။ ၂- ျပည္တြင္းစစ္ရပ္။ ၃- ေျမာက္ကိုရီးယားနဲ ့ ဆက္ဆံေနတာကို
ရပ္ ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။
  မွတ္ခ်က္- ဒီသံုးခ်က္ကို ၂ လအတြင္းမလုပ္ ရင္ ဦးသိန္းစိန္ စစ္အစိုးရဟာ သန္းေရႊတံုးကလိုပဲ 
ဖိအားေပးမႈေတြ ရင္ဆိုင္ရလိမ့္မယ္။ ဒီတခါပိုဆိုးလာနိင္ပါတယ္။ ဘာျဖစ္လို ့လဲဆိုေတာ့ ျမန္မာ ျပည္ရဲ 
စီးပြားေရးျပသနာဟာ အေမရိကန္ ၀င္မွရမဲ ့အေနထားျဖစ္ေနလို ့ပါ။ စီးပြားေရးပိတ္စို ့မႈရပ္ဆိုင္းဖို ့၊ ရင္းႏွီး
ျမွပ္ႏွံမႈအသစ္ေတြရဖို ့ေတြျဖစ္တယ္။ ဒါအျပင္ အေရအေသြးညံဖ်င္းလြန္းတဲ ့ျမန္မာစစ္တပ္ကို 
 Professional Army  အျဖစ္တည္ေဆာက္ေရးမွာလဲ အေမရိကန္ရဲ ့အကူညီလိုေနပါတယ္။

"We believe that any political prisoner anywhere should be released," Clinton told reporters during the first visit to this long-isolated nation by the top U.S. diplomat in more than 50 years. "One political prisoner is one too many in our view."
Clinton made her comments ahead of a meeting with the most famous political prisoner of all, opposition leader and Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who was released last year after two decades of on-and-off imprisonment and has said she will run in upcoming elections.
Meeting earlier with President Thein Sein and other senior government officials in the capital of Naypyidaw, Clinton offered a small package of rewards for steps it had already taken but made clear that more must be done.
"I came to assess whether the time is right for a new chapter in our shared history," she said, adding that the U.S. was ready to further improve relations with the civilian government in the Southeast Asian nation — also known as Burma — but only if it stays on the path of democratization.
In a series of modest first steps, she announced that Washington would allow Myanmar's participation in a U.S.-backed grouping of Mekong River countries; no longer block enhanced cooperation between the country and the International Monetary Fund; and support intensified U.N. health, microfinance and counternarcotics programs.
A senior U.S. official said Thein Sein had outlined his government's plans for reform in a 45-minute presentation in which he acknowledged that Myanmar lacked a recent tradition of democracy and openness. He asked for U.S. help in making the transition from military to full civilian rule, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the private diplomatic exchange.
Clinton replied that she was visiting because the U.S. was "encouraged by the steps that you and your government have taken to provide for your people."
Yet, she also made clear that those steps must be consolidated and enlarged if the U.S. is to consider easing near-blanket economic sanctions that block almost all American commercial transactions with Myanmar. "While measures already taken may be unprecedented and certainly welcome, they are just a beginning," she told reporters.
"We're not at the point yet where we can consider lifting sanctions that we have in place because of our ongoing concerns about policies that have to be reversed," Clinton said. "But any steps that the government takes will be carefully considered and will be matched."
She called for the release of political prisoners and an end to brutal ethnic violence that has ravaged the nation for decades. She also warned the country's leadership to break suspected illicit military, nuclear and ballistic missile cooperation with North Korea that may violate U.N. sanctions. "Better relations with the United States will only be possible if the entire government respects the international consensus against the spread of nuclear weapons ... and we support the government's stated intention to sever military ties with North Korea," she said.
In his presentation, Thein Sein vowed that Myanmar would uphold its U.N. obligations with respect to North Korea, according to the senior U.S. official. He also told Clinton that Myanmar was actively considering signing a new agreement with the U.N. nuclear watchdog that would allow unfettered inspections of atomic sites in the country, the official said.
Nyan Win, a spokesman for Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party, welcomed the U.S. package of rewards and said, "The incentives will help promote better relations and a better future for the country and I hope the government will expand its reform process."
Clinton rejected the idea that the U.S. outreach to Myanmar was partially motivated by the growing influence of China. "We are not viewing this in light of any competition with China," she said. "We are viewing it as an opportunity for us to re-engage here."
"We welcome positive constructive relations between China and her neighbors. We think that is in China's interest as well as in the neighborhood's interest," she said.
Recalling Obama's mention of "flickers of progress" in Myanmar when he announced that Clinton would visit the country, Clinton urged the leadership not to allow them to "be stamped out."
"It will be up to the leaders and the people to fan flickers of progress into flames of freedom that light the path toward a better future," she said. "That — and nothing less — is what it will take for us to turn a solitary visit into a lasting partnership."
Before dinner with Suu Kyi, Clinton was touring the Shwedagon Pagoda, a 2,500-year-old Buddhist temple.
Despite the historic nature of Clinton's visit, enthusiasm has been muted within Myanmar.
Chan Tun, a 91-year-old veteran politician and a retired ambassador to China, said: "This is a very critical visit because U.S. will understand Myanmar better through engagement. U.S. engagement will also help Myanmar's dependence on China."
But Clinton's presence has been overshadowed by the arrival Thursday of the prime minister of Belarus and his wife, to whom two large welcoming signs were erected at the airport and the road into the city. No such displays welcomed Clinton.
The Belarus Prime Minister made the front page of Thursday's edition of the government-run New Light of Myanmar newspaper. Clinton's visit was mentioned in a two-paragraph story on page 2.
Still, some in Myanmar welcomed the attention from the U.S. "I watched the arrival of Ms. Clinton on Myanmar TV last night," 35-year-old taxi driver Thein Zaw said. "I am very happy that Ms. Clinton is visiting our country because America knows our small country, whether it is good or bad."

တရုတ္နဲ ့ အေမရိကန္ စစ္ဗိုလ္လူပ်က္ ေတြ အတြက္ အားျပိဳင္စရာ အေၾကာင္းမရိွ