Pubdate: Thu, 18 May 2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 2000 Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Jonathan Manthorpe, CANADA SHIFTS FOCUS ON DEALING WITH BURMA Tentative move toward contact with repressive, drug-dealing Rangoon junta is an effort to fashion a credible policy. Lloyd Axworthy and his department of foreign affairs are shifting their focus from the repressions of Burma's military regime to the effects on Canadian "human security" of the junta's drug trafficking in an effort to fashion a credible policy toward the southeast Asian country. The re-think comes after years of stalemate as vocal pro-reform Burmese lobby groups here have vehemently opposed any Canadian contact with the Rangoon regime on the drugs trade or any other issue. This echoes the position of confined Burmese democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi who insists economic and diplomatic isolation of the junta is the only way to force political reform and kill the drug industry on whose profits the regime increasingly depends. Conflicting arguments arguments have come from Canadian diplomats and especially the RCMP which has long complained it cannot work to curb drug trafficking into Canada if it is barred from contacts with the Burmese regime. After going along since the early 1990s with the lobby groups' demands for embargoes, Axworthy is now edging toward contact with the Rangoon junta. The department's justification is that the trafficking of heroin from Burma's northern "Golden Triangle" opium poppy fields is now such a deadly domestic Canadian problem it demands a firm response from Ottawa. The shift is backed by evidence from social service officials in British Columbia who say about 1,500 people in the Lower Mainland have died of drug overdoses, mostly Burmese heroin, in the past three years. There are no expectations, however, that the re-tuning of Ottawa's position will see changes in the policy to discourage Canadian business and industry from investing in the resource-rich country of about 42 million people. The as-yet tentative move toward contact with the Rangoon junta, widely accused of torture, slavery and brutal repression of the political opposition as well as involvement in the drug trade, has drawn words of sharp displeasure from Suu Kyi, the leader of Burma's National League for Democracy. Suu Kyi, in effect under house arrest in Rangoon, reiterated her demands for international economic and political isolation of the regime when she was recently informed of Ottawa's new leanings by Canadian diplomats. Axworthy's re-evaluation comes as the 10th anniversary approaches on May 27 of elections in Burma won conclusively by Suu Kyi's NLD, but which the military has refused to recognize. A decade of refusal to reform by the junta has led to a re-evaluation of policies in several capitals, especially Tokyo, Washington and Canberra. There is no longer much confidence that sanctions against Rangoon and blanket support for Suu Kyi will cause the collapse of the junta and inauguration of the legitimate government. Raymond Chan, the secretary of state (Asia-Pacific), sought Monday to calm fears that Canada's objective of promoting reform in Burma is being abandoned. "We want an engagement that makes progress. We want to see some movement on [the junta's] side because their record is not good." Drug trafficking accounts for at least a third of Burma's exports and relations between the drug lords and the military regime are tightly intertwined, according to experts. Chan said both the United States and Australia, traditionally as opposed to contacts with the junta as Canada, have recently established links to the regime to try to stem the flow of drugs to their countries. From experience, Ottawa is still uncertain overtures to the junta will be fruitful. "On one hand we have been approached by business groups doing business there who say the regime wants to find a solution and to break out of its isolation," Chan said. "But on the other hand, when ever we talk to Rangoon government officials about reform they take a very hard line." In the early 1990s when Rangoon was invited to take part in security discussions at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Regional Forum prior to full membership in the organization, Axworthy approached the Burmese foreign minister. "He contacted the foreign minister and asked them to be more cooperative and to start some human rights dialogue with us," Chan said. "They flatly rejected any kind of engagement." As a result Axworthy opted for the pressure of discouraging Canadian businesses from investing in or trading with Burma, Chan said. The limiting of diplomatic contacts with the junta and ban on anything that smacks of cooperation with the regime has made life difficult for Mounties trying to stem the drug trade. On at least one occasion they have been forbidden to attend a conference organized by Interpol and the United Nations because it was held in Rangoon. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg