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NEWSMAKER - Myanmar's Thein henchman to radical reformer!

Thu, 15 Nov 2012 21:00 GMT Source: reuters // Reuters By Andrew R.C. Marshall and Martin Petty

Sein,

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BANGKOK, Nov 16 (Reuters) - There is a Jekyll-and-Hyde quality to President Thein Sein, the bookish-looking former general Barack Obama will meet on Monday during the first visit by a U.S. president to Myanmar. Thein Sein has been both a dictator's henchman and a man widely seen as a Nobel Peace Prize contender. He rose to power in a rabidly antiAmerican military junta, yet spearheaded its efforts to build better relations with the United States. His past remains opaque, even as he leads Myanmar into a new era of transparency after nearly five decades of dictatorship. When his quasi-civilian government took power four months after a rigged election in November 2010, Thein Sein was easy to dismiss as a puppet for a still-powerful military lurking behind a new democratic facade. Few predicted what happened next. Thein Sein launched an ambitious programme of political and economic reform that could transform the impoverished nation of 60 million people also known as Burma. He released political prisoners, scrapped censorship, legalised trades unions and protests, sought peace with ethnic minority insurgents and pushed through legislation on everything from land reform to foreign investment. Thein Sein's reputation as a corruption-free moderate among hawkish hardliners has earned him widespread praise from world leaders, top economists and Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. For years the junta's greatest foe, Suu Kyi was released from house arrest a week after the November 2010 election. She met Thein Sein nine months later and, in a critical endorsement, declared him "sincere" about reforming Myanmar. With his reformist zeal and growing domestic popularity, Thein Sein was widely tipped to win the Nobel Peace Prize in October. A Western diplomat who has met the bespectacled, soft-spoken president many times described him as "modest, courageous and committed".

"Those who knew him before he became president felt that he was aware of the poverty of his people, had seen the progress made by others in the region and recognised the need for change," he said. "HIS OWN VISION" Those comments were echoed by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who got to know Thein Sein when he was the military regime's prime minister from 2007-2011. He felt Thein Sein had been inspired by the world around him. "He must have seen and heard the real situation ... the international perception and Myanmar's image," Ban told a group of journalists during his last trip to Myanmar in May. "As soon as he became president, he has his own visions to make his country better and more prosperous, where human dignity would be respected." But Thein Sein's reputation still suffers from his role as a loyal servant to former dictator Than Shwe, who during 19 years in power jailed political opponents, gunned down pro-democracy protesters and commanded a military accused of killing, raping and torturing members of ethnic minority groups. Thein Sein was described last year as "Than Shwe's most malleable puppet" by Irrawaddy, a prominent Myanmar news service long based in neighbouring Thailand. A man of humble rural beginnings and son of a landless farmer and monk, Thein Sein joined the military in his early 20s. But he was always more of a bureaucrat than a soldier, serving as Than Shwe's personal assistant in the 1990s. He kept his reputation as "Mr Clean" despite four years as a commander in the lucrative drug-producing Golden Triangle region, where several successors were tarred with allegations of smuggling and abuse of power. In a 2001 speech to officials in the Golden Triangle, Thein Sein referred to two suspected drug-lords as "real friends", according to Bertil Lintner, the author of seven books on Myanmar. The two suspects were leaders of the United Wa State Army, described by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration as "Southeast Asia's leading heroin and methamphetamine trafficking organisation". "CONSUMMATE INSIDER" Under the dictatorship, regional commands often served as springboards to higher office. In 2003, Thein Sein was given a senior position in the State Peace and Development Council, as the military junta was then known, becoming part of Than Shwe's secretive and paranoid inner circle.

A 2007 U.S. Embassy cable described him as a "consummate insider". He was prime minister when the regime sparked international outrage by crushing pro-democracy protests led by Buddhist monks. He also presided over a national convention to draft the 2008 constitution, which enshrines the military's powers and privileges, and was dismissed by the White House at the time as a sham. The convention, which was boycotted by Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party as undemocratic, lasted 15 years. "Actually, we could have wrapped all of it up in a day, but there's a need to make it look good, isn't there?" Thein Sein said in 2007, according to the Shan Herald Agency for News, a website run by exiles in Thailand. The following year he led the widely criticised response to Cyclone Nargis, which killed at least 130,000 people and flattened villages across the Irrawaddy River delta. The junta initially denied entry to international aid agencies and was so tardy in providing its own humanitarian relief that the international community considered delivering aid by force. But Thein Sein is also said to have "appealed directly" to the much-feared Than Shwe to belatedly allow foreign aid workers into the disaster zone, according to a 2008 U.S. diplomatic cable. The devastated areas included Konkyu village, Thein Sein's birthplace. As Than improve Myanmar reaching Shwe's prime minister, ties with the United by Senator Jim Webb. out," said a 2009 U.S. Thein Sein led the junta's attempts to States during an August 2009 visit to "The generals left no doubt they are diplomatic cable.

As president, Thein Sein seems to have distanced himself from his junta days. In a speech to the U.N. General Assembly in New York in September he referred to the past government as "authoritarian" and in an address to parliament in March spoke of the need to "root out the evil legacies deeply entrenched in our society".

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