ROUGH CUT, NO REPORTER NARRATION<br/> <br />U.S. President Barack Obama met Myanmar's opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon, pressing for more change in the country.<br/> <br />Political and economic reforms launched two years ago seem to have stalled and taken the sheen off what was seen as a rare foreign policy achievement for Obama.<br/> <br />"Much hard work remains to be done, and that many difficult choices still lie ahead. the process for reform is by no means complete or irreversible," he said.<br/> <br />He also urged Myanmar to give universal rights to Yohingya Muslims, who are are stateless and live in apartheid-like conditions in Rakhine state in the west of the predominantly Buddhist country. Almost 140,000 were displaced in clashes with ethnic Rakhine Buddhists in 2012.<br/> <br />"And discrimination against the Rohingya or any other religious minority, I think does not express the kind of country that Burma, over the long-term, wants to be," Obama said.<br/> <br />Myanmar began its emergence f
