Wednesday, 22 February 2012

EU to begin sanctions review in February

By AFP
Published: 19 January 2012
EU to begin sanctions review in February thumbnail
The EU has also decided to open an office in Burma following reform in the country (Reuters)

The European Union is mulling whether to begin lifting sanctions against Burma as soon as February to encourage signs of reform after decades of outright military rule, EU diplomats said Wednesday.

Aid for the southeast Asian nation is also under consideration, as well as a visit soon by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, her spokesman Michael Mann told AFP.

“In the light of developments in the country, we have launched a general review of our policies,” he added.

The 27-nation bloc’s response to a string of conciliatory gestures by the nominally civilian government in Burma is to be announced after talks between EU foreign ministers in Brussels on Monday.

The ministers are expected to announce willingness “to consider initial steps in February” on a start in lifting the sanctions, which otherwise come up for an annual review in mid-April, an EU diplomat said.

“Some countries want to give a sign of encouragement before April elections” which will see a historic bid for parliament by Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, the source said on condition of anonymity.

In Paris, the foreign ministry said Britain and France had agreed to call for “a gradual revision of European sanctions” and would propose at Monday’s talks “the first measures in the very short term”.

But Britain’s William Hague and French counterpart Alain Juppe also agreed in a phone conversation Tuesday that the EU must remain vigilant, with the democratic standards of partial legislative elections 1 April impacting the “new approach”.

European states last year extended by 12 months a set of trade and financial sanctions despite Suu Kyi’s release in November 2010, but lifted travel bans and an assets freeze on a third of the cabinet, including the foreign minister.

In exchange for an end to all sanctions, the EU demanded Burma release all political prisoners and launch a dialogue with the opposition.

Since coming to office, the new military-backed government dominated by former generals has released hundreds of political prisoners and made other reformist moves, including dialogue with the opposition and pursuing peace deals with ethnic minority rebels.

The moves have sparked intense debate worldwide on potential policy change and in Brussels intensive discussions have been under way all week to overcome “differences of opinion and decide how to encourage Myanmar [Burma]” ahead of Monday’s ministerial talks, a source said.

Britain and some Nordic nations favoured ensuring the April by-elections were fair and free while other European countries, notably France and Germany, favoured quick action to encourage the reform process.

“There are steps before you lift sanctions,” said one diplomat on condition of anonymity. “Encouraging measures can be a first step, and then you lift sanctions.”

Earlier this month, Hague, the first British foreign minister to visit Burma in over half a century, called for “much more” work to be done before sanctions could be lifted.

It is “very important that we do not relax the pressures prematurely”, he said.

This week, French foreign minister Juppe said in Burma that he was confident President Thein Sein was a reformer.

“It’s a certainty. It’s enough to look at what he has done in the past few months,” he said, describing the president as a “wise man, completely determined”.

Should differences between EU nations persist, a decision to lift even very few sanctions in February could be strained as this would require unanimity.

In April a unanimous vote would be required to maintain the sanctions.

Ministers meanwhile are expected to agree to offer more development aid and other financial measures to bolster the reform process.

In January, the EU announced it would open an office in Burma’s main city Rangoon to manage aid programmes and play a “political role”.

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Comments


  1. FYI: The European Commission Humanitarian Aid department (ECHO) has had an office in Yangon since 2005. It manages humanitarian aid projects funded by the EU and implemented by various implementing oartners such as the UN, NGOs and Red Cross. In 2012, the budget for Burma/Myanmar is Euro12.5 million. This does not include development funds from other EU institutions such as DG Development. EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid Kristalina Georgieva visited Yangon and Naypidaw in September 2011.

  2. Aung Bu says:

    Very good news. thanks to EU





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