Top ASEAN officials meet Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing for ‘cooperation’ talks

Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing/Photo:AFP

AFP

Myanmar’s military chief has held talks with top ASEAN officials on the junta’s participation in the Southeast Asian regional bloc, from which it has been isolated since the 2021 coup, state media reported Thursday

The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations has led so far fruitless diplomatic efforts to solve the conflict unleashed by the military’s putsch, which has displaced 2.7 million people, according to the United Nations.

Myanmar is still a member of ASEAN, but the generals have been excluded from top-level bloc meetings over their refusal to engage in a peace plan and with their opponents.

Army chief Min Aung Hlaing met ASEAN special envoy Alounkeo Kittikhoun and secretary-general Kao Kim Hourn on Wednesday in the capital Naypyidaw, according to the Global New Light of Myanmar.

They “exchanged views on the issues of Myanmar’s cooperation in ASEAN,” the state-owned newspaper reported.

They also “discussed the best cooperation of Myanmar in ASEAN, the conditions of Myanmar’s participation in ASEAN meetings” and the junta’s plan to hold fresh elections, the newspaper said.

The Myanmar crisis has divided ASEAN — long derided by critics as a toothless talking shop.

Indonesian, Malaysia and the Philippines have called for tougher action against the junta, while Thailand has held its own bilateral talks with the generals as well as detained democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Last year, officials from Indonesia held talks with a shadow “National Unity Government” that is dominated by lawmakers ousted in the coup and which the junta has designated a “terrorist” organisation.

In January, the junta sent a senior bureaucrat to an ASEAN foreign ministers meet in Laos — the first time the country attended a high-level meeting of the bloc in more than two years.

More than 5,000 people have been killed and more than 26,000 arrested in the military’s crackdown on dissent since the coup according to a local monitoring group.

The coup ended a short-lived experiment with democracy and plunged the Southeast Asian nation into turmoil.

Across swathes of the country, the junta is battling established ethnic minority armed groups as well as pro-democracy “People’s Defence Forces.”