Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany says Myanmar sanctions will force junta to negotiate

The EU has slapped sanctions on 10 Myanmar officials and two firms. The bloc wants Myanmar's military to negotiate an end to the violence, according to Germany's top diplomat.

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The EU hopes new sanctions against Myanmar will force the country's ruling military junta to the negotiatin­g table, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said on Monday.

Maas was speaking after a virtual meeting of his EU counterpar­ts in which the bloc decided to slap new measures on the southeast Asian nation.

They affected 10 officials and two companies linked to the crackdown that has seen more than 700 people lose their lives.

"The military regime is continuing its course of violence and maneuverin­g the country into a dead end. That is why we are increasing the pressure to bring the military to the negotiatin­g table," Maas said.

Earlier this month, the top diplomat warned of the threat of a possible civil war in Myanmar.

In its firmest EU response yet to the ousting of an elected government led by Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, the EU said 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 has also been added to the bloc's sanctions list.

Which companies are being sanctioned?

The two firms hit with asset freezes and visa bans were the Myanmar Economic Corporatio­n (MEC) and Myanmar Economic Holdings Ltd (MEHL) which dominate sectors including trading, alcohol, cigarettes and consumer goods., according to the EU's official journal.

It bars EU companies and individual­s from doing business with them, dealing a potentiall­y heavy economic blow to Myanmar's rulers.

Last month, EU government­s hit junta chief Min Aung Hlaing and 10 other senior officials with sanctions over the February 1 seizure of power and bloody suppressio­n of protests.

Several Western powers are seeking to increase pressure on Myanmar's new leadership by targeting their key moneymaker­s.

The US and Britain, the former colonial power, have already imposed sanctions on the MEC and MEHL, and Washington has hit Myanmar's state gem company as well.

What has been happening in Myanmar?

Mass protests have been taking place across Myanmar since February, with the army responding with an increasing­ly brutal crackdown.

According to the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners activist group, 737 people have been killed by security forces since the coup and 3,229 remain in detention.

The armed forces claim there had been widespread fraud during a general election late last year.

The vote had returned elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her

National League for Democracy (NLD) party to power.

Election officials have denied the military's claims, saying there is no evidence to support them.

 ??  ?? Protests have been held across Myanmar for months
Protests have been held across Myanmar for months

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