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The Capitol in Washington, D.C., where the U.S. Congress voted to maintain sanctions against trade with Myanmar for the time being.



  U.S. Congress bucks international trend, extends ban on imports from Myanmar


August 10, 2012


Despite the moves by other countries, which have selected to relax restrictions on trade with Myanmar (Burma), the U.S. Congress has voted to prolong a ban on imports from the Southeast Asian nation, including on rubies and jadeite.

Both the Senate and House of Representatives voted to extend by one year the ban on all imports from Myanmar. However, according to Mitch McConnell, the Republican Party's leader in the Senate, the White House has been authorized to waive the renewed ban if it judges that the Myanmar government is continuing its reform efforts.

"By renewing this bill today and keeping the measure on the books even as we are open to new flexibilities, we will help send a strong signal to those in Burma," said Representative Joe Crowley, a Democrat, in his address on the House floor.

The more hardline approach of the United States is contrast to that followed by its allies. Following the election on April 1 of Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi to the parliament in Rangoon, foreign ministers from the 27-nation European Union agreed to a one-year suspension of measures targeting about 500 individuals and more than 800 companies. The only sanctions to remain in place were those associated with arms sales.

Nonetheless, on July 11, U.S. President Barak Obama ordered the easing of certain sanctions, thus allowing American companies to make investments and provide financial services in Maynmar. He said the move sent "a strong signal" of U.S. support for the reform process.

The United States began imposing sanctions on Myanmar in May 1997 and expanded them over the years. The U.S. Congress passed a comprehensive sanctions bill, the JADE (Junta's Anti-Democratic Efforts) Act, in 2008.

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