Brown warns Burmese junta to release Aung San Suu Kyi or face action

London, June 20 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on Friday made an impassioned appeal to Burmese military junta to release opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi on her 64th birthday, or face tough sanctions.

The Prime Minister said it was a “tragedy” that the Nobel Peace Prize winner was spending her 64th birthday behind bars because of the regime’s absurd and contemptible show trial.

Brown said EU leaders meeting in Brussels had backed both tougher action and a potential visit to the country by United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, The Telegraph reports.

“Today is Aung San Suu Kyi’s birthday and it is a tragedy that she will spend it in prison as the Burmese regime pursues its absurd and contemptible sham trial of her,” Brown said at a post-summit press conference.

“So on this day I, and all of Europe, call again for Aung San Suu Kyi’s release,” he added.

“The Burmese regime must know that there will be consequences for their actions so Europe agreed today to step up sanctions and take further targeted measures against the Burmese regime. We will also work with the rest of Asia to increase the pressure and I hope Ban Ki-moon, the UN Secretary General, will be able to visit Burma soon,” he said.

“So I send two messages to Burma today: to Aung San Suu Kyi: you are not alone; to the Burmese generals: the time for democracy is now,” The Telegraph quoted Brown, as saying.

Brown said the text agreed by the European Council called for the “immediate and unconditional release of Aung San Suu Kyi.” (ANI)

Brown welcomes Afghan commitment

A commitment by Nato countries to send an extra 5,000 troops to Afghanistan in the run-up to its presidential elections, has been welcomed by the Prime Minister. Skip related content
Related photos / videos Gordon Brown has welcomed Nato troop commitments in Afghanistan Mr Brown said the reinforcements, including around 900 from the UK, would strengthen security, protect forces from roadside bombs and make British streets safer from terrorism.

The pledge, taken at a summit in Strasbourg, France where protesters attacked police and set fire to a hotel and customs station, was warmly welcomed by Barack Obama as a “a strong down payment”.

But despite winning firm backing for his new campaign strategy, the US President did not secure any commitment from allies to match anywhere near the extra 21,000 troops he is sending there.

The Prime Minister denied Mr Obama had directly asked Britain to send an additional 2,000 troops on a permanent basis but made clear ministers had not ruled out deploying further forces in the future.

“Obviously we will continue to look at what is necessary both for the short-term, for the medium-term, and for the longer term,” he said.

Mr Brown and other leaders also piled pressure on Afghan president Hamid Karzai over a new “family” law, dubbed “abhorrent” by Mr Obama, which critics say legalises marital rape and restricts women’s rights.

And controversy surrounded the move by Nato members, at the security grouping’s 60th anniversary event, to name Danish premier Anders Fogh Rasmussen to be its next secretary general.

Turkey had opposed the 56-year-old Dane, who infuriated many Muslims by defending freedom of speech during an uproar over a Danish newspaper’s publication of the cartoons in 2006. He has also angered Turkey by opposing its membership in the European Union.

Speaking at a close-of-summit press conference, Mr Brown said: “We are working to build a successful democratic Afghanistan and that will mean that our streets will be safer in Britain. With important presidential elections to come in the next few months, we must not allow the Taliban to disrupt the democratic process.”

Britain To Commit More Troops To Afghanistan

Speaking at a post-Nato summit press conference, Mr Brown confirmed the troop increase but declined to give specific numbers

Britain To Commit More Troops To Afghanistan

Speaking at a post-Nato summit press conference, Mr Brown confirmed the troop increase but declined to give specific numbers

G20 outcome will build confidence: Spanish PM

London, April 3 (EFE) Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said the agreement reached Thursday at the G20 summit here would generate the confidence needed for the global recession to ‘touch bottom’ in the second half of the year.

He also announced at a post-summit press conference that Spain would contribute some 4 billion euros ($5.38 billion) of the $750 billion in new money that will be placed at the disposal of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to help poor and developing economies.

After the summits in Washington and London, Spain, the world’s eighth-biggest economy, has consolidated its position in the G20 as ‘a power in international circles’, the premier said.

Regarding the accords adopted Thursday in London, Zapatero emphasised the support for ending the lack of financial transparency and the ‘impunity’ of tax havens.

‘Today, the beginning of the end of the tax havens began,’ Zapatero said, noting that at the summit, the respective economy and finance ministers devised steps to sanction countries blacklisted for failing to cooperate with efforts against tax evasion.

With this accord, the differences between the French-German bloc and the US bloc regarding the need to adopt new spending programmes that boost the economy receded.

In Zapatero’s judgement, there is general agreement that the stimulus efforts made to date ‘has no precedent’ and that the approved plans are beginning to have an effect in the economic realm.

Spain, Zapatero said, has initiated one of the largest fiscal expansion plans, amounting to more than two percent of gross domestic product.

The unity shown by the G20, he added, contributed to generating confidence and confirming that in the second half of 2009 the recession will bottom out and ‘the prospect is for recovery’, noting that ‘touching bottom would certainly be a positive expectation’.

The Spanish prime minister said that the G20 nations likewise committed to stricter oversight and supervision of financial markets to prevent the recurrence of the kind of activities that caused ‘the most serious economic recession since World War II’.

He also underlined the need of commitment to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) set by the United Nations nearly a decade ago.

‘History will judge us, above all, by the willpower we put into the fight against poverty and misery,’ he warned.