19 Nov 2012
November 18. 2012 - RANGOON, Burma — From businessmen chasing new markets to basketball players serving as sports envoys, the past year has seen an unprecedented wave of American visitors to the once-pariah state of Burma.
On Monday, President Obama shows up.
"This is not an endorsement of the Burmese government," Obama said Sunday in Bangkok, the first stop on a three-nation tour that also takes him to Cambodia Monday night. "This is an acknowledgment that there is a process underway inside that country that even a year and a half, two years ago, nobody foresaw," he said.
Obama's day trip Monday to Burma — when he will meet with President Thein Sein, a former army general, and democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi — represents the first visit to Burma by a sitting U.S. president. The U.S. government recently began rolling back economic sanctions against Burma, also known as Myanmar, to recognize its transition from military rule toward a more democratic system.
"In the past, foreign governments didn't care about our country; we were treated with very low status on the world political stage," said U Kyi Win, a lawyer for Suu Kyi and her formerly banned party, the National League for Democracy. "Now Western countries deal with us on the same level, and this comes from the co-operation between Thein Sein and Aung San Suu Kyi to solve Myanmar's problems," he said Sunday.
Plenty of challenges remain, including longstanding conflicts in border areas, ethnic violence between Buddhist and Muslim communities, and the continued jailing of political prisoners. Several human rights groups, such as Human Rights Watch and U.S. Campaign for Burma, have criticized the presidential visit as premature.
Residents of Rangoon, Burma's largest city and former capital, were ready to welcome the U.S. president.
"Many Burmese like Obama. After he comes, there should be more development here," said Aye Nyein San, 26, a receptionist at telecom firm Yatanarpon.
"He can encourage the political changes here, and the conflicts in Rakhine state and Kachin state can be solved with his support," she said. Rakhine and Kachin are border areas where violence has escalated in recent months.
Graffiti artist Arker Kyaw recently sprayed a wall mural to welcome Obama in downtown Rangoon, also known as Yangon. Video producer Thu Myat, also a graffiti artist, said the fast growth of street art and slogans reflected the political and social changes here. He disapproved of Kyaw's stunt as too respectful of hierarchy — "I believe police let him do it; it's weird he was not arrested" — but he is confident the lifting of sanctions and Obama's visit will bring benefits. "Obama showed the green light to every country," he said. "Now Burmese people must grab the opportunity for themselves."
Sandy and Bill Hitchcock from Laguna Beach, Calif., flew into Rangoon on Sunday for a nine-day tour. Two other couples they will meet later, in Cambodia, declined to join them in Burma.
"They don't like the political regime here," said Sandy Hitchcock, 63. "I want to see it before it becomes the next big tourist trap," she said.
The tide of visitors already threatens to overwhelm Burma's limited capacity for tourism. "The airport now receives twice as many visitors as it was built for," Khin Mi Mi Tin, of the tourism ministry, said Sunday at the Rangoon airport. "We are building more hotels, but even the new hotels are fully booked."
"All of Myanmar likes Obama," she said. "He is interested in Asia and can help push us further towards democracy."
Nobel Peace laureate and Burma pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi addresses a gathering in India Saturday, a day before she was to return to Rangoon for a meeting with President Obama.(Photo: Manjunath Kiran, Getty Images)
She likes Suu Kyi, too. "She'll definitely be our next president."
Obama will set out his message for Burma's future in a speech Monday at the University of Rangoon, which authorities shuttered for years following student protests against the regime.
On Sunday, Burmese security guards led sniffer dogs around the site, as workers tried to smarten up the venue and new lines were painted on nearby roads.
"Speaking at the university is a clever choice," said U Kyi Win, the lawyer. "He is giving a signal that he cares about the students, and the Burmese people, and he wants to help the university recover its original status."
Sourced: usatoday