UN ENVOY TO PROBE BURMA CRACKDOWN!
The September crackdown sparked international outcry. Senior UN investigator Paulo Sergio Pinheiro has arrived in Burma - the first time the military government has allowed him to visit for four years.
Mr Pinheiro hopes to meet political prisoners and find out exactly how many people died when protests against the government were crushed in September.
The government says 10 people died. Others put the figure at more than 100.
The UN investigator has said he will leave immediately if the authorities fail to co-operate.
Mr Pinheiro, the UN's independent human rights investigator for Burma, has not been allowed to go there since November 2003.
His visit comes days after UN envoy Ibrahim Gambari spent six days in Burma, meeting a number of ministers as well as detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
The UN said afterwards that a path to "substantive dialogue" was now under way.
Mr Pinheiro did not speak to reporters as he arrived in Rangoon, Reuters news agency reported.
His proposed itinerary for the visit was still being "fine-tuned", a UN spokesman quoted by Associated Press said.
BBC Asia correspondent Andrew Harding says Mr Pinheiro will need free and unrestricted access to Burmese prisoners to do his job.
Mr Pinheiro wants full and free access to political prisoners.
The military government clearly resents this sort of intervention, our correspondent says.
The Red Cross has suspended its own prison visits because it is no longer allowed private access to detainees.
There is some evidence that external and internal pressure is beginning to have an impact on Burma's generals - and the fact that Mr Pinheiro is being allowed in is a concession of sorts, our correspondent adds.
BBC NEWS REPORT.
Mr Pinheiro hopes to meet political prisoners and find out exactly how many people died when protests against the government were crushed in September.
The government says 10 people died. Others put the figure at more than 100.
The UN investigator has said he will leave immediately if the authorities fail to co-operate.
Mr Pinheiro, the UN's independent human rights investigator for Burma, has not been allowed to go there since November 2003.
His visit comes days after UN envoy Ibrahim Gambari spent six days in Burma, meeting a number of ministers as well as detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
The UN said afterwards that a path to "substantive dialogue" was now under way.
Mr Pinheiro did not speak to reporters as he arrived in Rangoon, Reuters news agency reported.
His proposed itinerary for the visit was still being "fine-tuned", a UN spokesman quoted by Associated Press said.
BBC Asia correspondent Andrew Harding says Mr Pinheiro will need free and unrestricted access to Burmese prisoners to do his job.
Mr Pinheiro wants full and free access to political prisoners.
The military government clearly resents this sort of intervention, our correspondent says.
The Red Cross has suspended its own prison visits because it is no longer allowed private access to detainees.
There is some evidence that external and internal pressure is beginning to have an impact on Burma's generals - and the fact that Mr Pinheiro is being allowed in is a concession of sorts, our correspondent adds.
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