By failing to freshen up his speech, critics said Pranab Mukherjee appeared to ignore widespread pro-democracy protests in Myanmar and a deadly military crackdown.

India has been one of the staunchest allies of Myanmar’s military government, and has made only a muted call for political reform there despite the violent response to the demonstrations.

On Sunday, with the uprising seemingly quelled for now, Mukherjee read the same speech to a seminar in the north-eastern city of Guwahati on India’s ‘Look East’ policy that he had first delivered in the nearby city of Shillong last June.

In it, he set out efforts to work with Myanmar’s government to boost trade and improve cross-border links on anything from roads and railways to telecommunications and power.

When the speech was first given “Myanmar was not in the headlines for all the wrong reasons”, the Hindustan Times newspaper dryly commented in an editorial on Tuesday. “Somebody could have at least updated those lines.”

Foreign policy expert Professor Mira Sinha Bhattacharjea called it a ‘bureaucratic slip-up’ that nevertheless revealed that India had not changed its policy towards Myanmar’s generals.

“I don’t think it has changed, I don’t think it will change and quite honestly I don’t think it should change,” she said.

“But it doesn’t have to be quite so unsophisticated.”

India initially supported Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy but changed its strategy in the early 1990’s to court the military regime in what is seen as an effort to counter rival China.—Reuters

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