ASEAN calls summit on Myanmar crisis as EU imposes sanctions
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[April 20, 2021]
(Reuters) -Southeast Asian countries
will discuss the crisis in Myanmar at a summit in Jakarta on Saturday,
the ASEAN bloc's secretariat said on Tuesday, but Thailand's prime
minister said several will be represented only by their foreign
ministers.
Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said he would not be attending and that
Thailand would be represented by Deputy Prime Minister Don Pramudwinai,
who is also foreign minister.
"Some other countries will also send their foreign ministers," Prayuth,
a former army chief who led a coup in Thailand in 2014, told reporters
after a weekly cabinet meeting.
A Thai government official said on Saturday that Myanmar junta chief Min
Aung Hlaing would go to Jakarta, although the Myanmar government has not
commented. However, this is seen as unlikely - in previous stints of
military rule, Myanmar has usually been represented at regional meetings
by a prime minister or foreign minister.
The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has been
trying to find a way to guide fellow member Myanmar out of the bloody
turmoil that it descended into after the military overthrew an elected
government, led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, on Feb. 1.
But there have been divergent views among ASEAN members over how to
respond to the army's use of lethal force against civilians and the
group's policies of consensus and non-interference in each others’
affairs have limited its ability to act.
Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Singapore have sought to ramp
up pressure on the junta. Thailand, Myanmar's neighbour, has said it is
"gravely concerned" about escalating bloodshed, but close military ties
and fears of a flood of refugees mean it is unlikely to go further.
Brunei, the current chair of the bloc, said after a meeting of the
group's foreign ministers in March that ASEAN expressed concern about
the situation in Myanmar and called on "all parties to refrain from
instigating further violence".
LITTLE WILLINGNESS
Romeo Jr. Abad Arca, assistant director of the community relations
division of the ASEAN Secretariat, said Saturday's summit would take
place at its Jakarta headquarters under strict health and security
protocols due to the pandemic, confirming an earlier advisory.
According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP)
activist group, 738 people have been killed by Myanmar security forces
since the coup.
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Protesters defend themselves from the troops in Kale, Sagaing
region, Myanmar March 28, 2021 in this picture taken March 28, 2021
obtained by REUTERS.
Myanmar's military has shown little willingness to
engage with its neighbours and no sign of wanting to talk to members
of the government it ousted, accusing some of them of treason, which
is punishable by death.
Pro-democracy politicians including ousted members of parliament
from Suu Kyi's party announced the formation of a National Unity
Government (NUG) on Friday.
It includes Suu Kyi, who has been in detention since the coup, as
well as leaders of the pro-democracy protests and ethnic minorities.
The NUG says it is the legitimate authority and has called for
international recognition and an invitation to the ASEAN meeting in
place of the junta leader.
Former U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon urged his successor to engage directly
with Myanmar's military to prevent rising violence and said
Southeast Asian countries should not dismiss the turmoil as an
internal issue for Myanmar.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres' special envoy on Myanmar,
Christine Schraner Burgener, has communicated with the military
since the coup, but the junta has not allowed her to visit.
In its firmest response yet, the European Union said on Monday nine
members of the junta's State Administration Council, formed the day
after the coup, had been targeted with travel bans and asset
freezes. Information Minister U Chit Naing was sanctioned also.
The decision follows similar measures by the United States. Min Aung
Hlaing and Myint Swe, who has been acting president since the coup,
were blacklisted by the EU last month.
(Reporting by Reuters StaffWriting by Ed Davies and Raju
Gopalakrishnan; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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