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This is an archive article published on August 12, 2011

Myanmar vows to continue dialogue with Suu Kyi

Myanmar's army-backed regime held out an olive branch to its critics.

Myanmar’s army-backed regime held out an olive branch to its critics today,pledging to continue talks with democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi and to allow a visit by a UN human rights envoy.

In a rare news conference,information minister Kyaw Hsan said the nominally civilian government,which came to power after a controversial election last November,hoped to get “successful results” from cooperating with Suu Kyi.

The comments came shortly before Suu Kyi and labour minister Aung Kyi began a second round of talks in Yangon.

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“We will continue these kinds of meetings for the benefit of the people,” Kyaw Hsan told around 50 reporters and some 250 officials invited to the new government’s first media briefing in the capital Naypyidaw since taking power.

Kyaw Hsan said Tomas Ojea Quintana,UN special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar,who was last allowed into the country in February 2010,would return without specifying a date.

Suu Kyi was warned by the regime in June to stay out of politics but the first round of talks with Aung Kyi appeared to strike a more conciliatory tone.

She has also signalled her intention to remain in politics and today’s meeting comes two days before she is due to make her first overtly political trip outside Yangon since she was freed from seven straight years of house arrest in November.

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The Nobel Peace Prize winner first tested her freedom with a visit to an ancient temple city in central Myanmar in July,although politics was not officially on the agenda.

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