News / Asia

EU to Open Representative Office in Burma

TEXT SIZE - +

The European Union says it will open a representative office in Burma in the near future.   

Michael Mann, a spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, told VOA Tuesday that an agreement has been reached with the Burmese government to open an office in Rangoon. "It won't be a full EU delegation or anything like that. It will just be an office responsible mainly for the management of aid programs and so forth.  As to when it would be put in place, that's just a question for how long the administrative procedures might take. So I haven't got any precise information at this time," he said.

The office will report to the EU ambassador in Bangkok, in neighboring Thailand.

The EU decision follows the handover of power to a nominally civilian government in Burma in March.

After the November 2010 election, Burma's first in 20 years, the European Union and other western countries said they would observe developments with a view of easing sanctions if the new government implements democratic reforms. The sanctions were imposed following bloody military crackdowns on a pro-democracy movement.    

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Burma in November to assess its reform process, and British Foreign Secretary William Hague is in the country this week.  Politicians and rights groups have welcomed the government's moves to start a dialogue with the opposition and Burmese ethnic groups, but they are disappointed with the continued incarceration of a large number of political prisoners.

Ashton sent her top foreign policy adviser Robert Cooper to Burma last year, and the EU, in a move to encourage reform, slightly eased sanctions in April by ending travel bans and asset freezes on 24 civilian government officials.

You May Like

South Africa to Host World's Biggest Telescope

South Africa competed against Australia to host the telescope, the final decision was to split the SKA between the two countries More

Report: Global Warming Could Reverse Development

World Bank study says warmer climates threaten advances and could exacerbate poverty in world’s poorest regions More

Video Inmates Fight Fires, Gain Skills for Life After Prison

In California, physically fit inmates with no history of violent crimes can train, work as firefighters while serving their time More

This forum has been closed.
Comments
     
There are no comments in this forum. Be first and add one

Featured Videos

Your JavaScript is turned off or you have an old version of Adobe's Flash Player. Get the latest Flash player.
Your JavaScript is turned off or you have an old version of Adobe's Flash Player. Get the latest Flash player.
Video

Video Human Rights Film Festival Highlights Gender, Economic Issues

Twenty new films from around the world are screening in New York this week, as part of the 24th annual Human Rights Watch Film Festival, co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and IFC Center. The issues explored range from the rights of women, gays and the disabled, to economic justice, to political murder, torture and wrongful imprisonment. VOA’s Carolyn Weaver reports from New York.