By EDITH M. LEDERER / AP WRITER| April 25, 2012 ...
UNITED NATIONS—The UN secretary-general’s special adviser on Burma
says the resource-rich but desperately poor nation has the potential to
become an Asian tiger if it promotes investment, eases financial
restrictions and finds experts to develop the country.
Vijay Nambiar gave an upbeat briefing to a group of reporters on
Tuesday, ahead of Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s visit to Burma this
weekend, saying that after more than 20 years of “almost self-inflicted
hibernation” the country has undergone rapid and dramatic political
changes.
Vijay Nambiar, special adviser to the secretary-general on Burma, says
that the country could be the next Asian tiger. (Photo: UN)
“I think the pace as well as the nature of the change has been in
some ways extraordinary, and perhaps far in advance of what had been
envisaged” by the military, which ruled the country for 50 years, he
said.
Since last year, the new government headed by President Thein Sein
has overseen a wave of political reforms and won wide praise for
progress toward democratic rule. The government has freed political
prisoners, signed truces with rebel groups, and organized April 1
by-elections deemed free and fair that were overwhelmingly won by
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s party and earned the Nobel Laureate
a seat in Parliament after years of repression and house arrest.
“Today, after more than 20 years, Burma has a Constitution, elections
and a Parliament,” Nambiar said, which despite flaws never happened
before.
He said last year’s meeting between Thein Sein and Suu Kyi “has been a
major game changer,” and he praised the president’s statesmanship and
the opposition leader’s agreement to contest the April election despite
her opposition to the Constitution which was drafted during an era of
military rule and gives inordinate power to the military.
Another “game-changer,” Nambiar said, was the decision of the
10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations to choose Burma to
chair the organization in 2014.
The recent suspension of US and European Union sanctions, which were
imposed in the late 1990s to punish Burma’s former iron-fisted military
rulers, has also been important, he said.
But Burma’s progress towards democracy suffered a hiccup on Monday
when Suu Kyi’s party, the National League for Democracy, refused to take
its 43 new seats in Parliament because of a dispute over the lawmakers’
oath which says they must “safeguard the constitution.” It wants the
word “safeguard” replaced with “respect.” Party officials said they
expect the issue to be resolved soon.
“I think there is wisdom on both sides to get through this,” Nambiar
said. “I can’t see them going through elections and not solving this.”
He said one of the most important imperatives today is to develop
Burma, which he described as a country “twice the size of England or
France with a population much larger than Afghanistan and Iraq put
together which has had 60 years of conflict.”
According to the International Monetary Fund, Burma’s population in
2010 was 50.5 million and the country ranks 149th out of 185 on the UN’s
Human Development Index which measures the quality of life.
“There is a critical need for external investment, for easing of
financial restrictions, of currency reform,” Nambiar said. “All these
areas are extremely necessary—and quickly.”
He said in some ways the economic changes are “a little more
intimidating” than the political changes because with the transition now
taking place in the country “there is going to be this huge rush in
terms of investment and financial attention—even aid attention to
Burma—and the question of how to cope with it.”
It is going to require expanding the capacity of government
institutions and changing regulations, deciding what kind of internal
and foreign investments are needed, and planning to develop the
country’s private sector, he said.
Nambiar, who is Ban’s chief of staff, said the first thing the UN
plans to do is try and help the government prioritize its development
plan.
He noted that the government is bringing back some of its citizens
with expertise who have been living overseas, but “there is a huge lack
of human resources capability.”
Once these requirements are met, Nambiar said, “I think there is a strong possibility that Burma can emerge as a tiger.”
Looking ahead, he said there is also a generational change taking place
in Burma, including in the military and younger leaders, even in the
army, are going to face the same kind of challenges as their
counterparts elsewhere in the world.
http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/3058
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Burma Could Be Next Asian Tiger: UN Adviser
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