Share

Obama pledges to lift economic sanctions against Myanmar

US companies and banks have remained leery of involvement in one of Asia’s last untapped markets.

Advertisement

The Obama administration in May said it would lift some additional sanctions against state-owned enterprises and state-owned banks.

On the other hand, Suu Kyi is wary of losing what she still considers a powerful political bargaining chip against the military.

And yesterday, as she began her first trip to the USA as Myanmar’s leader, Ms Suu Kyi will be accountable for what her government has accomplished, and what it has not, since she took office six months ago.

According to the The Global New Light of Myanmar, Suu Kyi, who has met with President Obama has negotiated the reinstatement of her country to the Generalized System of Preferences and will therefore obtain tariff advantages for its exports to the world’s largest economy. Earlier on Wednesday, Obama sent Congress official notice that he was restoring trade benefits to Myanmar. According to the Associated Press news agency, the United States government retained sanctions on military-owned companies and scores of officials of the former ruling junta.

The official and aides spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

“Removing sanctions on the jade industry is important, and more transparency is needed on production and trading”, he told AFP.

Nor does the move does not normalize relations with Myanmar’s military.

Mr Phil Robertson, the deputy Asia director of Human Rights Watch, said: “The Burmese government doesn’t deserve a wide-scale lifting of sanctions”. “However, BBC reported, sanctions will remain in place against a “‘blacklist’ of at least 100 companies and individuals with links to the former military junta, as well as trade in jade and rubies”.

The U.S. plans to lift economic sanctions against Myanmar, but trade with the country’s military will still be restricted.

Washington will lift trade sanctions against Myanmar that have been in place for almost 30 years.

By the end of the gathering, she also seemed to accept the importance of a national ceasefire agreement that both the previous government and the armed forces treated as a steppingstone for broader talks about peace, federalism and constitutional reform. Some 125,000 Rohingya remain in temporary camps in the country’s Western Rakhine State following violence in 2012.

“We’ll want to hear from her directly about how she is viewing our sanctions regime”, said Rhodes.

“We are honest in trying to bring together the different communities”, Suu Kyi said.

It includes reinstating trade benefits for poorer nations, suspended in 1989 by George W.Bush over human rights abuses.

“[The] United States intends to sign a loan guarantee with five local microfinance institutions to support over $10 million in loans to small businesses in Myanmar, which will increase access to food and support employment opportunities for communities in Myanmar”, the statement said. The benefits will be reinstated as of November, following a review that includes whether the country is trying to improve conditions for workers, according a statement issued by the USA trade representative. She urged Americans to come to the country and “to make profits”. Washington also began easing sanctions after the military junta began ceding power to civilian rule. When Obama last visited Myanmar in November 2014, he voiced support for constitutional reform.

Advertisement

Delphine Schrank, journalist and author of the Rebel of Rangoon, said that the United States has been “phasing” out sanctions, and while the business community in Myanmar and the USA would like them removed entirely, there is an understanding within Aung San Suu Kyi’s party and the U.S. government that the “game is not over” yet in the transition process.

Suu Kyi meets Obama in Washington for first time as Myanmar leader