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EU in Burma sanctions extension | |
(about 12 hours later) | |
The EU has extended sanctions against Burma and renewed calls for the release of political prisoners, including opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. | |
The sanctions, which have been in place since 2006, were extended for one year. | |
But at a meeting in Luxembourg, EU foreign ministers offered to review the sanctions issue if Burma's government showed signs of democratic progress. | |
The ministers were also due to discuss the political crisis in Moldova and Croatia's stalled EU membership talks. | |
The current sanctions against Burma include a travel ban on the country's top officials, an arms embargo and a freeze of Burmese assets in Europe. | |
They were stepped up in 2007, after a crackdown by the Burmese government on protests by Buddhist monks, to include a ban on exports of timber, metals and precious stones. | |
Time to talk? | Time to talk? |
A statement released after the meeting said the council of 27 EU member states "deems it necessary to extend the current EU common position by another year, including the restrictive measures". | |
The statement added that the EU "underlines its readiness to revise, amend or reinforce the measures it has already adopted in light of developments on the ground". | |
The foreign ministers also called for the immediate release of more than 2,000 political prisoners, including opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi. | |
With general elections planned for next year, EU diplomats say Burma is yet to take the steps needed to make them credible and inclusive. | With general elections planned for next year, EU diplomats say Burma is yet to take the steps needed to make them credible and inclusive. |
But the EU has signalled its readiness to respond to any genuine progress, says the BBC's Oana Lungescu in Luxembourg, offering the prospect of ministerial talks on the margins of a regional meeting in Hanoi next month. | |
The foreign ministers were also due to discuss political crises in two countries neighbouring the EU - the violent unrest earlier this month in the former Soviet republic of Moldova, which has led to increased tensions with EU member Romania, and Croatia's membership talks, stalled by a border row with Slovenia. |