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U.N.'s Ban to meet again with Myanmar supremo over Suu Kyi

Sat Jul 4, 2009 5:02am IST
 
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By Louis Charbonneau

NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar (Reuters) - U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon meets again with Myanmar junta supremo on Saturday when he expects a verdict on whether he will be allowed to visit detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Ban requested the visit during a rare meeting with Myanmar Senior General Than Shwe and his top advisers on Friday, telling them that he wanted to meet with Suu Kyi in person. But he left the two-hour session with no clear answer.

"The secretary-general will meet again the senior general tomorrow morning," U.N. spokeswoman Marie Okabe told reporters.

Several senior U.N. officials said on condition of anonymity that Ban was expecting a brief answer to his request to meet Suu Kyi and to five proposals Ban made during his meeting with the reclusive junta leader and his top advisers.

But it was not clear whether they would agree to allow the secretary-general to see the 64-year-old Nobel laureate, who has spent 14 of the last 20 years in detention, mostly under house arrest at her lakeside home in Yangon.

Suu Kyi, who has spearheaded the campaign for democracy for two decades in the former Burma, is currently on trial for breaching a security law, which critics say is an attempt by the generals to keep her out of multi-party elections to be held next year.

After his meeting with Than Shwe in the country's remote new capital, Naypyidaw, Ban told reporters that the senior general had reacted coolly to his request to see Suu Kyi.

"He told me that she is on trial. I told him that I wanted to meet her in person," he said.  Continued...

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