Wed, 27 Nov 2024, 11:47 am

Myanmar’s junta leader meets with ASEAN special envoy

BD Daily Online Desk:
  • Update Time : Thursday, January 11, 2024
  • 30 Time View

Myanmar’s junta leader met with the special envoy of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), state media said Thursday, with the regional bloc seeking to find a diplomatic solution to the country’s conflict.

Myanmar’s junta, which seized power in a 2021 coup, is facing its biggest threat yet, according to analysts, after a coalition of armed ethnic groups launched a sweeping northern offensive last year.

 

Army chief Min Aung Hlaing met Alounkeo Kittikhoun, ASEAN’s special envoy, on Wednesday in the capital Naypyidaw.

The two discussed ‘efforts of the government to ensure peace and stability’, state newspaper The New Global Light of Myanmar reported Thursday.

The meeting comes ahead of an ASEAN foreign ministers meeting later this month in Laos, this year’s chair.

The bloc has so far failed to make substantial inroads into resolving the long-running conflict in member-state Myanmar.

No progress has been made towards implementing a five-point peace plan agreed three years ago, although former chair Indonesia welcomed ‘positive’ talks with the main sides in November.

The junta was represented by ‘interlocutors’ — according to a statement at the time — with Myanmar’s generals barred from high-level ASEAN meetings.

Friction between ASEAN members escalated last year over the former Thai government’s decision to meet with junta foreign minister Than Shwe.

Indonesia and Malaysia — among the army’s harshest critics within ASEAN — snubbed the meeting, while Singapore warned it was premature to engage the junta at such a high level.

Cambodia sent a junior foreign ministry official while China — long a key supporter of the Myanmar military — dispatched Deng Xijun, its special envoy for Asian affairs.

The split was a further blow to ASEAN’s faltering progress to defuse the crisis.

Fighting in northern Myanmar has only intensified.

The so-called ‘Three Brotherhood Alliance’ — a coalition of three ethnic armed groups — have seized trading hubs and towns vital for the cash-strapped junta after launching their October offensive.

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