Washington (ANTARA News/AFP) - A US congressman who has spearheaded sanctions aimed at pressuring Myanmar will pay his first visit to the country from Thursday to assess the pace of recent reforms, his office said.

While Myanmar has seen a rising number of high-profile international visits, Joe Crowley will be the first member of the US House of Representatives in more than 12 years to travel to the country also known as Burma.

Crowley, a member of President Barack Obama`s Democratic Party, will meet government officials and opposition icon Aung San Suu Kyi as well as ethnic minority leaders on his two-day trip, his office said.

"I am visiting the country to assess the situation on the ground, as well as to encourage the government to continue on the path of reform," Crowley said in a statement.

"While the government has taken some steps in the direction of reform, there is more that needs to be done," Crowley said.

Myanmar`s long-ruling generals last year handed power to a nominally civilian government. The United States and the opposition were initially skeptical, but hopes have been rising and Suu Kyi now plans to contest an April 1 election that could see her take part in the new parliament.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton paid a landmark visit to Myanmar last month in hopes of encouraging reforms, although she said that the United States needed to see more progress before it considers easing sanctions.

Crowley has been a sponsor of bills that authorize sanctions against Myanmar including a 2008 measure that stopped gems -- a key money-maker for the impoverished country -- from entering the United States via third countries.

US officials and lawmakers have closely tied their policies to the views of Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize winner who enjoys respect across the political spectrum in Washington.

Myanmar`s President Thein Sein has surprised observers by holding talks with Suu Kyi, suspending an unpopular Chinese-backed dam project and attempting to negotiate cease-fires with ethnic rebel groups.

But Myanmar has so far failed to meet Western and opposition expectations on the release of political prisoners.

Two US diplomats, Derek Mitchell and Luis CdeBaca, are back in Myanmar this week for talks. The foreign ministers of Myanmar`s former colonial rulers Britain and Japan also visited after Clinton`s trip.

Crowley, whose New York district has a large Indian American community, is heading to Myanmar after taking part in a congressional trip to India. (*)

Editor: Kunto Wibisono
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