The Asian Age

Nations curb Myanmar ties

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● US PRESIDENT Joe Biden said Wednesday he was issuing an executive order that will prevent Myanmar's generals from accessing $1 billion in assets in the United States, and promised more measures.

Seoul, Feb. 11: A growing number of government­s are curbing diplomatic ties with Myanmar and increasing economic pressure on its military over the coup last week that erased the fragile democratic progress in the long-oppressed Southeast Asian nation. President Joe Biden said Wednesday he was issuing an executive order that will prevent Myanmar's generals from accessing $1 billion in assets in the United States, and promised more measures. The US was among many Western government­s that lifted most sanctions in the past decade to encourage democratic transition as Myanmar's military rulers were taking gradual steps toward civilian rule — changes that proved temporary with the ousting of the elected government and detentions of Nobel Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and others.

One of the strongest reactions came from New Zealand, which has suspended all military and high-level political contact with the country and pledged to block any aid that could go to its military government or benefit its leaders. It also placed a travel ban on Myanmar's new military rulers. “We do not recognise the legitimacy of the military-led government and we call on the military to immediatel­y release all detained political leaders and restore civilian rule,” Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta said Tuesday.

In Washington, Biden said his actions were aimed at freezing US assets that benefit Myanmar's military leaders while maintainin­g support for health care programmes, civil society groups and other areas. The US already has sanctions in place against some Myanmar military leaders over the killings and persecutio­n of minority Rohingya Muslims. There has so far been no change in the level of US diplomatic representa­tion in Myanmar, where Thomas Vajda continues as ambassador.

In Brussels, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said European foreign ministers will meet Feb. 22 to review the 27-nation bloc's relations with Myanmar and explore ways to increase economic pressure. Its options could include sanctions targeting individual­s and businesses owned by Myanmar's military as well as cuts in developmen­t assistance.

Since 2014, the EU has granted Myanmar almost 700 million euros ($850 million). Borrell said the EU's special system for granting least-developed countries duty-free and quota-free access to all products except arms and ammunition could also be reassessed.

“We now need to develop a robust response to this unacceptab­le seizure of power, which reverses 10 years of democratic transition,” he said, adding that the review would examine “how closely we work with the government and its institutio­ns from a legal, financial and technical perspectiv­e, as well as the impact on beneficiar­ies.” The UN Human Rights Council, the 47-memberstat­e body based in Geneva, has scheduled a special session on Friday to consider the human rights implicatio­ns of the crisis in Myanmar.

 ?? — AFP ?? Activists take part in a protest outside United Nations University in Tokyo on Thursday, against the February 1 coup by Myanmar’s military.
— AFP Activists take part in a protest outside United Nations University in Tokyo on Thursday, against the February 1 coup by Myanmar’s military.

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