ប្រធានាធិបតីសហរដ្ឋអាមេរិក អូបាម៉ា នឹងហោះហើរទៅ ដល់កម្ពុជានៅថ្ងៃច័ន្ទ នេះ ជាប្រទេស ដែលពោរពេញដោយ ភាពតានតឹង ជម្រោងចម្រាស់ រំលោភសិទ្ធិមនុស្ស ពីសំណាក់រដ្ឋាភិបាល លោក ហ៊ុន សែន ជាពិសេសនៅក្នុងពេល ប្រជុំកំពូលសមាគមអាស៊ាន។
<<On Monday Obama will fly to Cambodia, where there is likely to be a tense encounter over human rights with Prime Minister Hun Sen, ahead of the East Asia Summit, the main institutional focus of his pivot of US foreign policy to the region.>>
US President
Barack Obama (L) and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (C) look at a
reclining Buddha during a visit the Wat Pho Royal Monastery in Bangkok
US
President Barack Obama said his historic trip to Myanmar on Monday
would recognise and prod reform, but warned no one should harbour
illusions that the long isolated state had done enough to change.
Obama
will be the first sitting US president to visit Myanmar, when Air Force
One touches down in Yangon, and hopes to embolden President Thein Sein
to deepen the country's startling march out of decades of iron-fisted
military rule.
"This
is not an endorsement of the Burmese government, this is an
acknowledgement that there is a process under way inside that country
that even a year and a half, two years ago, nobody foresaw," Obama said.
The
visit to Myanmar is the landmark centrepiece of Obama's fifth regional
trip as president, and his first since re-election, and represents his
latest bid to anchor US foreign policy in dynamic, rising Asia.
In
a symbolic illustration of how far Myanmar has come, the US leader will
stand side-by-side with democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi at the lakeside
villa where she languished for years under house arrest during junta
rule.
He
will also hold his debut meeting with Thein Sein and address the people
of Myanmar from the mothballed Yangon University, where students so
often were the spark for anti-junta unrest that they were exiled to the
suburbs.
But
he has faced accusations from some human rights groups that his visit
to the former pariah nation is coming too soon, especially as the
Rohingya Muslim minority faces repression in the western state of
Rakhine.
Thein
Sein has faced accusations of not sufficiently protecting the Rohingya,
but Washington was pleased last week when the former general condemned
the violence as "senseless" and "criminal" in a letter to the United
Nations.
Clashes
in Rakhine have claimed 180 lives since June and displaced more than
110,000 people, mainly Rohingya, who are denied citizenship and
described by the UN as among the world's most persecuted minorities.
Obama
said Thein Sein had taken clear steps that moved his country in the
right direction, which had seen Suu Kyi elected to parliament and scores
of political prisoners released.
"There
is an articulated commitment to further political reform," Obama said
at a press conference in Bangkok, before adding: "I don't think anybody
is under an illusion that Burma has arrived, that they are where they
need to be."
But
Obama said that if Washington waited for a "perfect democracy" to
emerge in Myanmar, the former Burma, it would be waiting for "an awful
long time".
"I
am not somebody who thinks that the United States should just stand on
the sidelines and not want to get its hands dirty when there is an
opportunity for us to encourage the better impulses inside the country."
Obama added that in part, he was taking advice from Suu Kyi, a fellow Nobel laureate. "If we see backsliding and slipping, we are in a position to respond appropriately," Obama said.
To
reward Thein Sein's reform drive, and to encourage more action, the
White House has lifted punishing sanctions it has levelled against
Myanmar, including an import ban and travel curbs for senior officials.
But
it wants him to go further, and is seeking a loosening of a political
system that is still heavily stacked in favour of military-backed
candidates.
Myanmar
said on the eve of the visit that it would review prisoner cases in
line with "international standards" and open its jails to the Red Cross,
as part of efforts to burnish its reform credentials.
Obama
arrived in Asia on Sunday, after a 19-hour flight from Washington, and
paid homage to Thailand's ancient history with a private tour of the Wat
Pho temple which is famed for a huge, golden statue of a reclining
Buddha.
Then
Obama called at Siriraj hospital in Bangkok for an audience with
revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej, seen as a symbol of continuity for a
kingdom with a turbulent political past.
Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton greeted and shook hands with the frail monarch, who turns 85 next month.
His
talks with Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra focused on trade,
regional politics, counter-narcotics issues and terrorism.
Yingluck
announced Thailand would join the Proliferation Security Initiative, a
global effort to curb trafficking of weapons of mass destruction, and
start negotiations on joining the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a planned
giant Pacific free-trade pact touted by Obama's administration.
The
Hawaii-born US president is making his fifth official visit to the
region, where he spent four years as a boy in Indonesia, and is diving
back into foreign policy after a year spent on the campaign trail.
On
Monday Obama will fly to Cambodia, where there is likely to be a tense
encounter over human rights with Prime Minister Hun Sen, ahead of the
East Asia Summit, the main institutional focus of his pivot of US
foreign policy to the region.
3 comments:
We have no lands to farm any more President Obama! Please help us!
We have no house to live any more President Obama! Please help us!
Our love one was murdered by Hun Sen! Please help us Mr President!
Cambodia justice system kill the poor and serve the rich only, We have never been treat as human being in the court! Mr President!
Please help Khmers! we think you are the living God!
Khmer people are love President Obama and hate Samdach Decho autocratic Hun Sen! Please help!
From the Voices of khmer Victims to President Obama!
General Lon Nol was cheating America such as fake number of ghost soldiers eg. on the list to America General Lon Nol put 100 000 soldiers and need salary for them from American tax payers and American gave in excess to general Lon Nol but in real number of soldiers have only 10 000 real soldiers. 90 000 soldiers salaries were go in to General Lon Nol pockets with his top few officers.
Lon Nol betrayal America and also betray his own soldiers and put their lives in danger that is why 85% of the soldiers were killed because of General Lon Nol management cheating skills.
American military aid, 50% of the American miliatry aid were sold to Khmer Rough that is why the real soldiers were lack of foods and weapons to fight, they end up died injusticely by General Lon Nol.
General Lon Nol's children and all his grandchildren are living on the suffer and khmers blood money.
His soldiers as well as millions of khmer death demand justice now!
Hey Pi Anh @7:49 AM,
You need to stop the stupid nonsense of your statement. You are a real Vietnamese dog eater. Go away, Vietnamese killer from the groups of secret Vietnamese killers in Khmer Rouges Uniforms from the Killing Field.
Post a Comment