Home ›› 12 Nov 2022 ›› Back

ASEAN agrees to talk to Myanmar opposition to quell bloodshed

AFP . Phnom Penh
12 Nov 2022 00:03:38 | Update: 12 Nov 2022 00:03:38
ASEAN agrees to talk to Myanmar opposition to quell bloodshed
(From Left) Philippines’ President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, Vietnam’s Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen, and Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo pose for pictures during the opening ceremony of the 40th and 41st Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Summits in Phnom Penh on  Friday – AFP Photo

Southeast Asian leaders agreed Friday to engage Myanmar opposition groups as they seek ways to quell the country’s escalating bloodshed which has seen thousands killed in clashes since last year’s coup.

The Myanmar crisis dominated the first day of a gathering of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) regional bloc in Phnom Penh that US President Joe Biden will join on Saturday.

Myanmar has spiralled into bloody conflict since the military ousted Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian government in February last year.

ASEAN agreed a “five-point consensus” peace plan with Myanmar in April last year but the junta has so far ignored it and the bloc has struggled for months to come up with ways to enforce it.

Frustrated by the generals’ foot-dragging, leaders on Friday tasked their foreign ministers with drawing up “an implementation plan that outlines concrete, practical and measurable indicators with specific timeline”.

In a 15-point statement thrashed out over two days of difficult talks among foreign ministers, the bloc agreed to “engage all stakeholders soon”.

“Engagement would be done in a flexible and informal manner, primarily undertaken by the Special Envoy of the ASEAN Chair on Myanmar,” the leaders’ statement said.

This will likely involve meeting representatives of Myanmar’s National Unity Government (NUG), a self-declared parallel body dominated by former lawmakers from Suu Kyi’s party.

The NUG considers itself to be the country’s legitimate government but the junta regards its members as “terrorists”, and engaging with the group would be a significant step for ASEAN.

‘This is a warning’

The leaders also warned the generals that if they do not step up, the bloc could expand a ban on junta figures attending ASEAN meetings.

“This is a warning, this is a strong message from the leaders,” Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi told reporters.

Within the bloc, Indonesia has been one of the main voices calling for tougher action on the junta, along with Malaysia and Singapore.

Philippine Assistant Secretary for ASEAN Affairs Dan Espiritu said that after more than a year of junta inaction it was time to “implement some other alternative plan in view of the limited progress”.

He characterised the situation in Myanmar as “critical and fragile with growing violence”.

The five-point plan calls for an end to violence, dialogue between all sides in Myanmar mediated by the ASEAN envoy and humanitarian aid.

Last year’s coup slammed the door on Myanmar’s brief dalliance with democracy after decades under army rule.

Earlier this month Singapore’s Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan warned that the Myanmar military had “a very high tolerance for pain, very high tolerance for isolation” and the crisis could take decades to resolve.

Elsewhere on Friday, the summit agreed “in principle” to let East Timor join ASEAN, granting it observer status while it works towards full membership.

ASEAN has blocked Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing from attending the gathering in Phnom Penh, which Chinese Premier Li Keqiang is also attending.

×