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Lady Liberty
US Senators Mitch McConnell and John McCain, Commentary,
Wall Street Journal Online, p. A14, 15 June 2005
Aung San Suu Kyi, the courageous leader of Burma's democratic opposition,
known simply as the Lady, will spend her 60th birthday this Sunday
in captivity. Though her National League for Democracy won a landslide
election in 1990, the ruling junta nullified the results, seized
power and placed Ms. Suu Kyi under house arrest. There she has remained,
on and off, for 15 years.
Despite her years in captivity, this brave woman remains resolute
in her commitment to democracy and justice for the Burmese people.
Through her words and actions, Ms. Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize
recipient, has demonstrated time and again that freedom is her life's
calling.
The world knows well the gross violations of human rights committed
by the State Peace and Development Council in Rangoon. The junta
routinely jails democracy activists, sometimes resorting to torture
and murder. The Burmese military employs rape as a weapon of war,
destroying the lives of innocent ethnic minority women and girls.
Child soldiers are pressed into the military's rank and file. Narcotics
production remains a profitable business, with illegal drugs flowing
across Burma's borders into neighboring countries. Refugees continue
to cross its borders as well, and HIV/AIDS is on the rise.
Under the junta's misrule, Burma has become a failed state and a
pariah in the world. Its economy lies in ruins, its meager social
services benefit only the military elite, and a climate of fear
pervades Burmese society. The export of drugs, refugees and disease
presents immediate and growing dangers to countries in the region,
and a series of recent bomb blasts in Rangoon has heightened instability.
Burma's ruler, General Than Shwe, displays a thuggish mentality
that holds little hope for any peaceful reconciliation inside his
country. Instead, Ms. Suu Kyi shines as the country's bright light
for a free tomorrow. Together with the NLD and Burma's ethnic minorities,
Ms. Suu Kyi has displayed infinite patience, dignity and wisdom
in dealing with one of the world's worst regimes.
As Ms. Suu Kyi marks her 60th birthday, it is time for the international
community to press anew for her immediate and unconditional release.
She, like all prisoners of conscience languishing in Burmese prisons,
should be freed and allowed full access to diplomats, NGOs and journalists
who
wish to meet with her.
In pursuit of this goal, the international community should take
a number of steps. The U.S. Congress should quickly pass -- and
the president should sign -- legislation extending import sanctions
against Burma. The State Department should redouble its efforts
in Europe and Asia to raise the issue of Burma, and to encourage
additional sanctions against the junta. The Association of Southeast
Asian Nations will hold its 12th Regional Forum Post Ministerial
Meeting in Laos next month, an opportunity for Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice to promote a common approach to Burma among our
Asean and EU partners.
Finally, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has an opportunity to
demonstrate personal leadership on this issue. He should call for
the Security Council to address the threat that the Burmese regime
poses to its people and to the region, and demand a meaningful reconciliation
process that includes the full participation of the NLD and ethnic
minorities.
Some in the international community fail to see the urgency of restoring
just rule in Burma, believing that the passage of time will eventually
undermine the SPDC's tyranny. But as we see today, the SPDC could
just as easily tighten its grip as lighten its repression. We must
stand behind Ms. Suu Kyi and other Burmese democrats to ensure that
time abets freedom, not despotism and misery.
The world has seen an astonishing hunger for freedom recently, in
varied countries across the globe. The Burmese people hunger for
democracy and justice no less than their brothers and sisters in
Ukraine, Lebanon, Afghanistan and Iraq. As we supported the legitimate
aspirations of the people in those nations, so too must we seek
freedom for all those denied it in Burma. Dr. Martin Luther King
observed that "right, temporarily defeated, is stronger than
evil triumphant." Right will ultimately triumph in Burma --
the question is not if but when. The international community would
do well to combine its efforts to hasten that joyous day. That would
truly be a fitting present for Ms. Suu Kyi.
McConnell and McCain are Republican senators from Kentucky and
Arizona respectively.
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