Posts Tagged Foreign Minister

U.N.’s Ban says to urge Myanmar to release Suu Kyi

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will strongly urge Myanmar’s ruling generals to release all political prisoners, including Aung San Suu Kyi, when he visits the country this week, he told reporters in Tokyo on Tuesday.

Speaking after talks with Japanese Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone, he said he was aware of concerns about his July 3-4 visit coinciding with the trial of Suu Kyi, the main opposition leader, who has been under house arrest for years.

“It may be the case that the trial happens during my visit to Myanmar. I am very much conscious of that,” Ban told reporters.

“I try to use this visit as an opportunity to raise in the strongest possible terms and convey the concerns of the international community of the United Nations to the highest authorities of the Myanmar government,” he added.

Ban said he would press the Myanmar government to carry out a range of political reforms.

“I consider that three of the most important issues for Myanmar cannot be left unaddressed at this juncture,” Ban told reporters. “The first, release of all political prisoners, including Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.”

The other two items were the resumption of dialogue between the government and opposition and the creation of conditions conducive to a credible election, he added.

Suu Kyi, 64, has been in prison or under house arrest on and off since 1989. The military junta that has ruled Myanmar since 1962 put her on trial again recently, accusing her of breaking the terms of her house arrest by allowing an unauthorised guest to stay at her lakeside home.

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Coalition heavyweights embrace Netanyahu speech

Top figures in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hawkish government lined up behind him Monday after he declared conditional support for Palestinian independence, despite the historically hard line they have taken on territorial concessions.

The hard-liners appeared buoyed by the nationalistic tone of Netanyahu’s speech and tough conditions he attached after caving to U.S. pressure to endorse a Palestinian state. Palestinians pronounced his offer a nonstarter because of these same conditions.

After decades of opposition, Netanyahu announced on national TV late Sunday that he was prepared to begin negotiations on the establishment of an independent Palestinian state. But he insisted that a future Palestine be demilitarized and rejected the aspirations of Palestinian refugees to return to homes in Israel.

Those conditions, along with demands that Israel retain sovereignty over a united Jerusalem and continue to expand West Bank settlements, enraged the Palestinians, who accused him of sabotaging negotiations.

“He announced a series of conditions and qualifications that render a viable, independent and sovereign Palestinian state impossible,” said Palestinian official Saeb Erekat.

But it won him support from hard-liners inside his government who historically have been cool to the idea of Palestinian independence.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, the most powerful hard-liner in Netanyahu’s government, said the prime minister’s speech outlined “the balance between our aspirations for peace and the aspiration for security.”

“Netanyahu opened the door to the Palestinians and the Arab nations to begin peace talks, and we hope the other side will take up the offer to renew negotiations,” Lieberman said after the speech.

Eli Yishai, head of the ultra-Orthodox Jewish Shas party, said Netanyahu “stressed his commitment to plausible peace and security.”

Shas, Lieberman’s Yisrael Beiteinu and the centrist Labor Party are Netanyahu’s main coalition allies. Labor has long endorsed the concept of a Palestinian state.

Netanyahu spoke after months of pressure from Washington to endorse Palestinian statehood, as successive Israeli governments before his have done.

The Palestinians want to establish a state that includes all of the West Bank and east Jerusalem — areas captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast War. Netanyahu ruled out sharing Jerusalem and made no mention of uprooting Jewish settlements built in the West Bank. Instead, he said existing settlements should be allowed to expand while negotiations proceed.

Netanyahu’s spokesman, Mark Regev, said Monday the Israeli leader had merely laid out an opening position that outlined his vision of a future peace agreement.

“These are not preconditions, but they’re essential requirements for success in these talks,” he told reporters.

Vice Premier Moshe Yaalon, a former military chief, said the speech was important because of the Palestinian reaction.

“I think what was presented yesterday reflects a broad Israeli consensus,” Yaalon told Army Radio. “I think it was important to juxtapose the broad Israeli consensus with the Palestinian rejectionism, which we exposed yesterday.”

Most dissent came from opposition politicians and backbenchers in Netanyahu’s ruling Likud Party.

“The prime minister knows that if he promotes it, he will face a strong opposition within the party, within the coalition,” said Likud lawmaker Danny Danon. “Deep inside himself, Prime Minister Netanyahu knows that a Palestinian state poses a major threat for the security of Israel.”

But among Likud’s heavyweights, even Cabinet Minister Benny Begin — who left Netanyahu’s first government more than a decade ago following territorial concessions to the Palestinians — did not openly clash with him.

“I clearly do not accept the concept of the establishment of a sovereign, Arab state in Judea, Samari and the Gaza Strip,” he said, using the biblical name for the West Bank. “History has shown that a sovereign power, even if its powers are limited at the outset, later throws off these restrictions,” he told Israel Radio.

But he didn’t threaten to resign.

In other developments, international Mideast envoy Tony Blair visited the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip, where he urged quick repairs to infrastructure damaged in Israel’s recent offensive.

Gaza’s reconstruction has been stifled by a partial blockade by Israel and Egypt that has been in force since the Islamic militant Hamas seized control of the territory in 2007.

It was Blair’s second visit to Gaza since he became envoy in 2007. Blair did not meet with Hamas, which is boycotted by the international community as a terrorist group.

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4 years in Afghanistan, Turks suffer only 1 attack

A top U.S. general says violence has reached on all-time high in Afghanistan, but Turkey’s foreign minister said Saturday that his troops have suffered only one attack in almost four years.

Turkey, the Muslim nation with the highest number of troops and civilian workers in the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force, has some 800 troops in the country. A separate team of about 140 civilians carries out aid projects in a violent province just west of Kabul, a region where U.S. troops have faced dozens of attacks this year.

But Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Turkish troops and civilians face little danger here because of the relations that Turkish citizens have built with Afghans. The fact that the two countries share a common religion plays a part but is not the only reason, he said.

“If you give confidence to the people that you are here for civilian purposes, not just for security and you are not … seeing them as a threat, this physical relationship is very important,” he told The Associated Press in an interview. “We shouldn’t give the impression to the people of Afghanistan that we see (them) as a possible threat.”

The Turkish provincial reconstruction team based in the capital of Wardak province conducts reading, writing and computer courses for women. Turkey has also built 42 schools and about 25 hospitals in Afghanistan, Davutoglu said.

Davutoglu’s advice to U.S. and other NATO nations seeking to tamp down rising violence in their regions of Afghanistan: ramp up nonmilitary projects.

“We see nonmilitary measures as important, even more important than the military and security issues,” he said. “Sustainability of security could be achieved only through economic development, political stability and cultural coexistence.”

The NATO-led force has a network of provincial reconstruction teams around the country manned by various countries. The teams concentrate on aid and construction projects.

Militant attacks have risen steadily in the last three years and have reached a new high. U.S. Gen. David Petraeus said Afghanistan saw 400 insurgent attacks during the first week of June. In comparison, there were less than 50 attacks per week in January 2004.

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