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Gillard became the first Australian prime minister to meet with a leader of Myanmar since 1984 when she held talks Monday with President Thein Sein. Australia, like many Western nations, has eased sanctions against Myanmar since the new reform-minded, nominally civilian government took power in March 2011. "We have seen changes happen, and as change has happened, every step of the way we have welcomed that change and we have shifted Australia's foreign policy settings to recognize that change," Gillard told reporters in Vientiane, the Lao capital. "This meeting is another recognition of that change," she said. Gillard said there was still more for Myanmar to do as it transitions to democracy. "I will certainly be saying as I have said here that we have continuing concern about human rights questions for ethnic minority groups," she said ahead of Monday's meeting. Although the Myanmar government has signed cease-fires with several ethic guerrilla groups, its forces are still fighting the Kachin minority in the country's north. It has also failed to put an end to communal violence in the western state of Rakhine, where clashes in recent months between minority Muslim Rohingya and Buddhist Rakhine have left scores dead and more than 100,000 displaced.
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