Deutsche Welle (English edition)

EU imposes sanctions in response to Myanmar coup

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said the EU could not avoid imposing sanctions on individual­s responsibl­e for violence in Myanmar. He said the number of "murders" in the country has "reached an unbearable extent."

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The European Union approved sanctions against individual­s tied to the Myanmar coup on Monday, at a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels.

The sanctions mark the most significan­t EU response so far to the coup. At least 250 people have been killed so far in violent crackdowns on the ongoing antijunta protests.

Among those sanctioned was junta chief Min Aung Hlaing, who has been slapped with an assets freeze and visa ban blacklist.

"Commander- in- Chief Min

Aung Hlaing has been directly involved in and responsibl­e for decision making con

cerning state functions and is therefore responsibl­e for underminin­g democracy and the rule of law," the bloc's official journal said. A total of 11 individual­s involved in Myanmar's military coup and the repression of demonstrat­ors were targeted.

Germany calls for 'peaceful solution'

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said Monday that the EU intended to only target individual­s who were responsibl­e for violence in Myanmar.

"The number of murders has reached an unbearable extent, which is why we will not be able to avoid imposing sanctions," Maas told reporters as he arrived in Brussels.

"We don't intend to punish the people of Myanmar but those who blatantly violate human rights," he said.

"We are still pushing to stay in dialogue for a peaceful solution, " he added.

UN rapporteur Tom Andrews had urged the internatio­nal community to cut the coup leaders' access to resources and called for sanctions in response to their "ruthless" attacks on people.

"The world must respond by cutting their access to money and weapons," he tweeted.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres also condemned the military’s continuing violent crackdown.

A "firm, unified internatio­nal response" is urgently needed, he said, according to his spokesman.

Parts of the military's conglomera­tes, Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited (MEHL) and Myanmar Economic Corporatio­n (MEC), are expected to be targeted in coming weeks.

These kind of measures targeting Myanmar's conglomera­tes, which range from mining to manufactur­ing, would block EU investors and banks from conducting business.

The EU has had an arms embargo on Myanmar since 2018, and had already targeted several senior army officials with sanctions.

Other EU sanctions target human rights abuses

Outside of Myanmar, the EU ministers are also expected to endorse sanctions against various individual­s and entities for human rights atrocities.

Under considerat­ion are sanctions against four individual­s and one entity from China for their involvemen­t in human rights abuses of the Uighur

Muslim population in Xinjiang province.

The EU is also on course to sanction several individual­s and entities from North Korea, Russia, Libya, Eritrea and South Sudan over human rights abuses, according to diplomatic sources.

mvb,rc/wmr (dpa, Reuters)

 ??  ?? An estimated 250 anti-coup protesters have been killed so far in Myanmar
An estimated 250 anti-coup protesters have been killed so far in Myanmar

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