THURSDAY, March 28, 2024
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Some citizens still apprehensive about lifting of US sanctions

Some citizens still apprehensive about lifting of US sanctions

US President Barack Obama's decision to lift economic sanctions against Myanmar has been welcomed, but some living in one of South-east Asia's poorest nations are concerned that the move is premature and will ease pressure for reforms.

The decision, announced on Wednesday during Aung San Suu Kyi's first visit to the White House as Myanmar's leader, comes as her new civilian government tries to engineer a democratic transition while sharing power with a military that has been guaranteed a quarter of all seats in the parliament.
 
An arms embargo and restrictions on US engagement with Myanmar's military will still hold.
 
Suu Kyi, who previously supported sanctions against her country, said alongside Obama: "We think the time has now come to remove all sanctions that hurt us economically, because our country is in a position to open up to those who are interested in taking part in our economic enterprises."
 
Myanmar's economy is a bright spot in a region clouded by sputtering growth and political tensions. According to an Asian Development Bank report in March, its gross domestic product, which grew 7.2 per cent last year, is expected to chart the highest growth in Asia this year at 8.4 per cent and next year at 8.3 per cent.
 
Since Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy swept the elections in November last year, the Nobel laureate has focused much of her administration's energy on peace talks to end the decades-long hostilities between the military and ethnic armed groups.
 
"Unity also needs prosperity," she said on Wednesday in Washington, where she also met Secretary of State John Kerry and some lawmakers.
 
"People, when they have to fight over limited resources, forget that standing together is important," she emphasized.
 
Obama said lifting sanctions was "the right thing to do" to "ensure that the people of Burma see rewards for a new way of doing business and a new government." Myanmar was previously known as Burma.
 
Ending sanctions would effectively take 38 individuals and 73 companies off the US blacklist. Many were seen as being closely tied to Myanmar's military, which controlled the country for some five decades before elections in 2010.
 
In a sign of how opinions are divided within Myanmar, a proposal by a member of parliament to lobby for the removal of US economic sanctions was defeated last month in the Lower House, with 219 votes against and 151 votes in favour.
 
"If sanctions are totally lifted, it will only benefit the cronies and businessmen close to the former government," political observer Yan Myo Thein told The Straits Times.
 
However, businessmen and legal experts noted that the move was overdue, given that regulatory requirements imposed by these sanctions were creating bottlenecks in banking transactions.
 
Even though the European Union lifted its sanctions on Myanmar in 2013, the ubiquity of US dollar-denominated deals meant that US sanctions continued to affect the business environment. While Coca-Cola has re-entered Myanmar, many smaller US businesses remained daunted by sanctions.
 
"The country has already come a long way," said Frankie Tan, the director of an infrastructure and utilities firm who has been based in Myanmar for 16 years. 
 
"We should lift sanctions and see if the whole country could move further by opening up," Tan said.
 
In July, the government unveiled a 12-point economic policy that pledged, among other things, to cut red tape, support competition, create jobs and improve budget transparency. It was criticised for its brevity.
 
Naypyitaw has now drawn up a new investment law that Suu Kyi expects to be adopted by the parliament 'within the next few weeks.'
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