YANGON, Myanmar, Oct. 18, 2007

Myanmar Announces Constitution Committee

Junta Outlines Its "Road Map" To Democratic Reform After Brutal Crackdown

  • Monks receive rice for lunch at a monastery in Bago, on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar, Oct. 18, 2007. Photo

    Monks receive rice for lunch at a monastery in Bago, on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar, Oct. 18, 2007.  (AP Photo)

  • Photo Essay Myanmar Monks March

    Buddhist monks and their supporters protest against military junta.

  • Photo Essay Rallying For Myanmar

    Global support for protesters as government attempts to crush uprising.

(CBS/AP)  Myanmar's ruling junta Thursday night announced the formation of a committee to draft a new constitution for the country, another step in the government's "road map" to democracy that is supposed to lead to free elections sometime in the future.

State radio and television said the committee would be headed by Chief Justice Aung Toe, with the country's attorney general serving as deputy. A number of retired doctors and professors were also named to the committee.

The move come after the junta brutally suppressed pro-democracy demonstrations last month, jailing thousands. The government insists it will make democratic reforms only according to its own seven-step plan.

Earlier Thursday, the U.N.'s envoy for Myanmar suggested the country's military rulers be offered incentives to move toward democratic reforms, as the country's junta released three prominent detainees it arrested in connection with recent pro-democracy protests.

U.N. envoy Ibrahim Gambari, visiting Indonesia on a six-nation tour to press Asia to take the lead to resolve the Myanmar crisis, also said China - the junta's top ally - could "continue to do more to really move the authorities in Myanmar" along the path of change.

"We are going to continue to see China as an ally," he told reporters.

Gambari said one approach could be "a combination of strong encouragement of the authorities in Myanmar to do the right thing along with some incentives to say that ... the world is not there just to punish Myanmar."

He did not elaborate, but his remarks come as the EU and countries such as the United States are widening sanctions imposed on the country.

(AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana)
Gambari, seen at left, met with junta leader Senior Gen. Than Shwe in Myanmar earlier this month, as well as twice with pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, but he has so far failed to bring about a dialogue between the two sides.

The U.N. envoy is supposed to return to Myanmar in November, but has said he hopes he can move the date up. He has already visited Thailand and Malaysia, and will also stop in Japan, India and China.

The junta said Wednesday it detained nearly 3,000 people in connection with the protests, adding that hundreds remain in custody and that it is still hunting for others.

But the regime released the country's best known comedian, as well as a popular actor and his wife who had been taken into detention last month for openly supporting the anti-government demonstrations.

Relatives and entertainment sources said Thursday that Zarganar, famed for his satirical jibes against the government, and actor Kyaw Thu along with his wife were released Wednesday. Zarganar had been held since Sept. 26 while Kyaw Thu and his wife were arrested Oct. 10.

Quote

The current arbitrary arrests, secret detention and widespread reports of ill-treatment and torture make a mockery of promises made by the Myanmar authorities.

From Amnesty International statement
London-based Amnesty International said Wednesday that an increasing number reports from Myanmar tell of deaths, torture, lack of food and medical treatment in overcrowded detention facilities across the country.

"The current arbitrary arrests, secret detention and widespread reports of ill-treatment and torture make a mockery of promises made by the Myanmar authorities to cooperate with the United Nations ... for early release of all political prisoners," a statement from the human rights group said.

The junta meanwhile continued its propaganda offensive against the pro-democracy movement. The state-run New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported Thursday that 48 blocks of TNT were found last week after investigations by authorities which led to U Kovida, a 23-year-old monk at Yangon's Nan Oo monastery.

He reportedly hid the explosives in the monastery and then moved them to another location, where they were found.

The state media has circulated many stories seeking to discredit or denigrate the pro-democracy demonstrators, most of whom were non-violent. It earlier described finding pornography and other unsuitable material in monks' quarters of monasteries that had been raided.

Gambari's suggestion of incentives is not a new one. In 1998, the United Nations and World Bank held secret talks with Myanmar's government and opposition leaders to offer the junta US$1 billion in financial and humanitarian aid if it would open a dialogue with the opposition.

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband also said this week that economic support could be given to Myanmar if it opens a dialogue with its opponents, including Suu Kyi.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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by xzavierbrown October 18, 2007 4:11 PM PDT
the constitution would read

"*** Y O U A N D T H E U. N."
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