Myanmar\'s Suu Kyi courts investment for strife-torn Rakhine state

Myanmar's Suu Kyi courts investment for strife-torn Rakhine state

AFP  |  Ngapali (Myanmar) 

leader touted Rakhine state's "untapped" economic potential to investors Friday, but glossed over violence that has scorched the area - most recently claiming the life of an 18-year-old civilian.

It has been scored by ethnic and religious conflict, especially in its restive northern region closest to

More than 740,000 Rohingya Muslims fled across the border after a bloody crackdown in August 2017.

The is now also fighting rebels from the Rakhine ethnic minority, who are Buddhist.

But in opening remarks to foreign companies at a Rakhine investment forum gave an upbeat characterisation of the economic boon awaiting investors.

Much of the state's potential "still remains untapped", she said at the forum in Rakhine's Ngapali beach, which is far south of the conflict area.

She trailed the promise of tourism, and specifically the as "one of the shining assets of Rakhine State".

Participants from India, Japan, Korea, and were in attendance - the latter is building a massive port in the south of Rakhine and pipelines running through the strategically important state.

blamed the international community for focusing "narrowly on negative aspects related to problems" in the northern part of the state rather than the potential to uplift Rakhine through development.

Rakhine, she said, is brimming with opportunities and "warm and friendly people, all eager to be part of the development adventure".

While Myanmar's former junta stunted the Southeast Asian nation's economy for decades, the advent of a civilian government under Suu Kyi in 2016 raised hopes of a turnaround in fortunes.

But slow reforms, a weakening currency, and conflict have stalled economic progress.

Suu Kyi's image as an upholder of human rights has also been shattered by the Rohingya crisis, which the UN has called ethnic cleansing.

The treatment of the Rohingya has spooked western investors and has looked to its Asian neighbours to fill the gap.

China, and lead foreign investment in as of January, according to government statistics.

Suu Kyi's positive comments were undercut by fresh fighting in Rakhine's north between the military and the Arakan Army, an ethnic Rakhine force.

Villagers held a funeral for an 18-year-old Rakhine woman on Friday after she was killed in crossfire two days earlier as soldiers descended on their district in Rathedaung township.

"She was cooking near the house of the village head," a villager from Min Phoo village told AFP, requesting anonymity for safety reasons.

"Our villagers did nothing wrong." police could not be immediately reached for comment.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 22 2019. 14:00 IST