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Kyaw Win wrote that he has served in Myanmar's Foreign Ministry for 31 years, including more than three years in Washington. He says he fears returning to the country because his efforts to improve bilateral relations with the U.S. have been continually rejected and "resulted in my being deemed dangerous by the government." Shifting from the previous U.S. policy of diplomatic isolation of Myanmar, the Obama administration has attempted to engage its government but made little discernible progress. Kyaw Win urged the U.S. to help set up an international council of inquiry to investigate human rights violations in conflict zones of Myanmar, where long-simmering conflicts between government forces and ethnic armies have flared up in recent months. He also calls for the U.S. to implement "highly targeted financial sanctions against the government and their cronies that serve to keep them in power." Kyaw Win is the second senior diplomat from Myanmar's mission in Washington to seek political asylum in the U.S. in recent years, following the defection of deputy chief of mission Aung Lynn.
[Associated
Press;
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