Tuesday, April 22, 2008

British Envoy Says 'Atmosphere of Intimidation' Clouds Burma Polls


FREEDOM TO DEMOCRACY IN BURMA


BANGKOK (AFP) -- A top British envoy on Myanmar [Burma] said Friday an "atmosphere of intimidation" was clouding next month's referendum on a new constitution and urged the military-ruled country to let opposition forces take part.Michael Williams, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's envoy on Myanmar, said Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party must be allowed to participate in the May 10 poll.Williams, who was in Bangkok for discussions with Thai officials, told reporters that he hoped the vote "will have credibility and legitimacy and will allow participation and inclusion of all Myanmar's social and political forces.""At the moment, for the UK, we are concerned there is an atmosphere of intimidation prevailing about the country," he added."The process falls short of what the UK would like to see," Williams said on the last leg of his four-country Asian tour.


The NLD is urging people to vote against the junta-backed charter, which activists say will simply entrench the army's role in Myanmar, which has been ruled by the military since 1962.At least 23 anti-charter activists were arrested on Tuesday for wearing T-Shirts emblazoned with the world 'No,' the NLD reported.The party has also said that any attempts to campaign against the constitution were being suppressed.Official NLD documents were being confiscated by authorities, they said, while local party organisers had been detained and interrogated,The referendum will be the first balloting in military-run Myanmar since 1990, when Aung San Suu Kyi led the NLD to a landslide victory that was never recognised by the junta.


She remains under house arrest.The regime says the referendum will pave the way for multi-party elections in 2010, but activists say the constitution was drafted with no public input.The NLD and other pro-democracy groups are calling for a "No" vote, but they have little ability to campaign effectively because the junta has outlawed speeches and leaflets about the referendum.

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