The Nobel peace laureate said the exploitation of Burma's oil and gas riches
was a particularly sensitive area and recent deals between the government and
China are shrouded in secrecy. Western companies, too, have been eager to invest
in the south-east Asian nation as the sanctions it faced under military rule are
gradually lifted.
"Any new investment that comes in because of the
lifting or suspension of sanctions should add to the democratic process rather
than subtract from it," Suu Kyi told reporters in Geneva, a day after landing in
the Swiss city on her first visit to Europe in 24 years.
"I would like
to see a sound, effective energy policy in Burma and this should be related to
the kind of extractive investments that we invite in," she said.
Suu
Kyi's two-week visit to Europe began in Geneva with a speech today to the annual
meeting of the International Labour Organisation, whose campaign against slavery
and child labour in Burma drew constant attention to the junta's exploitation of
its people.
The ILO decided yesterday to reward Burma for reforms
undertaken so far, lifting restrictions on its participation in the
organisation's work that had been in place since 1999.
From Switzerland,
Suu Kyi flies to Oslo, where on Saturday she will make a belated acceptance
speech and accept the Nobel Peace Prize that was awarded to her 21 years earlier
while she was detained by the military after leading a pro-democracy party to
victory in Burma's 1990 election.
Asked by The Associated Press whether
she could forgive the junta for ignoring the outcome of those elections and
keeping her under house arrest for 15 of the next 22 years, the woman who is
seen as an icon of the democracy movement took the high road.
"In some
ways I don't think they really did anything to me," she said. "I do not think I
have anything to forgive them for."
AP
Best wishes to Suu Kyi for her birthday on 19th June.
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