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Rediff.com  » News » Democracy important, but Myanmar cannot be isolated: India

Democracy important, but Myanmar cannot be isolated: India

By Jaishree Balasubramanian in Kuala Lumpur
July 26, 2006 18:17 IST
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India, which has been urged to use its influence to bring democratic reforms in Myanmar, Wednesday said one specific country cannot be isolated and chided for not following democratic norms as there were others who also fell into that category.

At the same time, New Delhi underlined the importance of democracy after Australia asked it to use its influence on Myanmar to help it turn a "new leaf".

"We do not choose our neighbours, we have to live harmoniously. There are other neighbours too who are not following democratic norms," Minister of State for Defence Rao Indrajit Singh said, apparently referring to Pakistan.

Singh, who is here to attend the ASEAN Regional Forum, told Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer that New Delhi has always been a champion of democracy. "We wish democracy would prevail, but we cannot isolate Myanmar, there are other countries too," Singh told PTI after meeting Downer and Vietnamese Foreign Minister Tham Gia Khiem at bilateral meetings ahead of the meet.

India enjoyed good and peaceful ties with Yangon, Singh said adding, "We have to live with them." He also credited Myanmar with squashing ambitions of terrorists from India's northeast who wanted to seek refuge there.

ASEAN has been disappointed with Myanmar's refusal to take steps towards democratic reforms and the continuing house arrest of Nobel laureate Aung Sang Suu Kyi.

Malaysian Foreign Minister Syed Hamid Albar said in an article in the Wall Street Journal on Sunday that since Myanmar did not want to cooperate with ASEAN, countries like China and India which enjoyed good ties with Yangon could try and influence it. However, a joint communique issued by the ASEAN foreign ministers Tuesday after their annual meeting said that the grouping recognised that Myanmar needed both time and political space to deal with its many and complex challenges.

On the issue of supplying uranium to India, Downer said Australia would have difficulty in doing so since they had not supplied to non-NPT signatories so far. "That is their constraint," Singh said adding, Downer noted that the outcome of the US-India nuclear deal may influence things.

On his meeting with Vietnam's new foreign minister, Singh said both countries felt the need to strengthen the warm ties they have had for several years. Vietnam has expressed keen interest in cooperating with India in the areas of investment and IT and wanted to have broader engagement with New Delhi.

Later, the ministers of the East Asia Summit's participating states had a luncheon meeting where it was noted that the 17 priority areas identified by the member countries when they met last year for the first meeting had been brought down to five. These are energy, finance, education, avian flu and national disaster mitigation.

However, Singh noted that the issue of counter-terrorism efforts which had been there in the earlier agenda was no longer there. The issue of a pan-Asian free trade area as envisaged by India and Japan too did not find place in the revised agenda.

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Jaishree Balasubramanian in Kuala Lumpur
Source: PTI© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.
 
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