Myanmar

Neighbors’ efforts to help end Myanmar crisis raise suspicions among protesters

Reuters

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Neighbors’ efforts to help end Myanmar crisis raise suspicions among protesters

'WE WANT DEMOCRACY.' A slogan is written on a street as a protest after the coup in Yangon, Myanmar February 21, 2021. Picture taken with iPhone panoramic mode.

File photo by Stringer/Reuters

(4th UPDATE) Some democracy activists in Myanmar fear any deal with the junta would confer legitimacy on it and its scrapping of the November election result

Myanmar’s military-appointed foreign minister flew into Thailand on Wednesday, February 24, for talks with two of his neighbors as they intensified efforts to resolve a crisis over Myanmar’s coup, despite the skepticism of its pro-democracy camp.

The minister, Wunna Maung Lwin, made the first foreign trip by a member of the new military government as opponents of the February 1 coup again took to the streets in Myanmar.

The army seized power after alleging fraud in a November 8 election swept by Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD), detaining her and much of the party leadership. The electoral commission dismissed the fraud complaints.

Indonesia has taken the lead within the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) in efforts to steer a path out of the crisis and its foreign minister, Retno Marsudi, arrived in Bangkok on Wednesday and met Wunna Maung Lwin and Thai Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai.

A Thai source said the Myanmar minister also had a meeting scheduled with Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha.

The Indonesian effort has raised suspicion among Myanmar activists who fear dealing with the junta would confer legitimacy on it and its bid to scrap the November election. They insist the result should stand.

Dozens of protesters gathered outside the Thai embassy in the main city of Yangon with signs reading: “Respect our vote” and “We voted NLD.”

“Our foreign minister is Aung San Suu Kyi,” the protesters chanted, referring to the post she held in the government she led after winning a 2015 election in a landslide.

In Bangkok, Thai prime minister Prayuth, a former army chief who seized power in a 2014 coup, declined to confirm to reporters he had met the Myanmar minister.

“Some things are not official,” he said. “We offer support as an ASEAN country that has to cooperate and offer well-wishes that everything works out smoothly.”

This week has seen huge rallies and a general strike to denounce the coup and demand Suu Kyi’s release despite a warning from authorities that confrontation could get people killed.

A Reuters report this week fanned suspicion about Indonesia’s approach after it cited sources as saying Indonesia was proposing that ASEAN members send monitors to ensure the generals stick to their promise of fair, new elections.

The military has not given a time frame for a new election but it imposed a one-year state of emergency when it seized power so it would likely be after that.

An Indonesian foreign ministry spokesman later said it was not backing a new election. The Indonesian foreign minister had been expected to fly to Myanmar on Wednesday but the plan was dropped, her ministry said.

“This is not the ideal time to conduct a visit,” ministry spokesman Teuku Faizasyah told a briefing in Jakarta.

DIPLOMATIC EFFORTS. File photo of Myanmar’s Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin during the 70th session of the United Nations General Assembly at the UN Headquarters in New York, October 2, 2015.
File photo by Eduardo Munoz/Reuters
Worry over violence

The Myanmar-based Future Nation Alliance activist group, said earlier in a statement a visit by Retno would be “tantamount to recognizing the military junta.”

The group demanded foreign officials meet Htin Lin Aung, a member of a committee representing ousted members of parliament appointed the “sole responsible official for foreign relations.”

Protesters in the second city of Mandalay marched on Wednesday in support of the ousted parliamentarians.

A procession of elephants also marched in Mandalay.

As well as the political crisis, the coup is compounding Myanmar’s economic woes.

Military chief General Min Aung Hlaing has called for state spending and imports to be cut and exports increased to revive what he called an ailing economy.

He did not link the protests to economic problems but said the authorities were following a democratic path in dealing with them and police were using minimal force, such as rubber bullets, state media reported.

Security forces have shown more restraint compared with earlier crackdowns against people who had pushed for democracy during almost half a century of direct military rule.

Even so, 3 protesters have been shot and killed. The army has said one policeman was killed.

The crisis has restored Myanmar’s reputation as the problem member of the 10-country ASEAN and the diplomatic scramble by its neighbors comes as wider international concern is growing.

China has traditionally taken a softer line as have ASEAN neighbors.

But the Group of Seven (G7) rich nations on Tuesday, February 23, condemned intimidation and oppression of those opposing the coup.

The United States imposed sanctions on two more members of the junta and warned it could take more action, while the European Union has said it was considering sanctions that would target businesses owned by the army. – Rappler.com

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