U.S.
President Barack Obama is aboard Air Force One on his way to Asia, where he
will visit Thailand , Burma and Cambodia on his first foreign trip
since being re-elected earlier this month.
The
trip underscores Obama's increased focus on Asia as he tries to fulfill his
pledge to strengthen the U.S.
economy during his second four-year term in office. The Obama administration
has said that American foreign policy and engagement will "pivot"
toward Asia in the future.
When
he arrives in Burma Monday,
Obama will be the first U.S.
president to visit the country, which has emerged from decades of tight
military control. The Burmese government recently has yielded to international
pressure and begun making democratic reforms, but some human rights groups have
cautioned that it is not yet a fully free country.
President
Obama is scheduled to meet with both Burmese President Thein Sein and Aung San
Suu Kyi, the nation's leading democracy activist, who has only been free since
2010, after nearly two decades of detention or house arrest. Suu Kyi won the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1991 but was only able to travel to Norway to
accept the award this year.
The
U.S.-based rights group Human Rights Watch told VOA the president should have
waited to travel to Burma
until the country makes more progress in restoring basic freedoms. HRW says Burma should have gone beyond a partial amnesty
and released all held as political prisoners, and also should have taken direct
action to stop violence directed at ethnic and religious minorities,
particularly in western Burma .
President
Obama begins his Asian tour in Bangkok ,
Thailand , where
he is arriving late Sunday afternoon (local time). HRW says the U.S. leader also should bring up human rights with
this longtime U.S.
ally, due to concerns about free speech, military abuses against insurgents in
the south and inadequate protection of refugees.
Obama
also will attend a meeting of regional ASEAN leaders in Cambodia ,
another destination where he is expected to raise concerns about long-standing
human rights problems. The president is expected to urge Cambodian Prime
Minister Hun Sen to hold free and fair elections and end land seizures. ---VOA
News
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