Asean cautiously optimistic of progress on Myanmar, SCS conflicts
LUANG PRABANG (AP) – China’s increasingly assertive posture in the South China Sea and the escalating violence in Myanmar topped the agenda of Southeast Asian diplomats at their meeting in Laos yesterday, with the Laotian foreign minister expressing guarded optimism that progress could be made this year on both acrimonious issues.
Lao Foreign Minister Saleumxay Kommasith told reporters that Thailand was moving ahead with plans to provide more humanitarian assistance to Myanmar, where more than 2.6 million people have been displaced by the civil war.
Saleumxay said it was a good sign that the military leaders who seized control of Myanmar in February 2021 from the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi had, for the first time, sent a high-level representative to attend the meeting of Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) foreign ministers in the historic city of Luang Prabang in Laos.
“We feel a little bit optimistic that the engagement may work, although we have to admit that the issues that are happening in Myanmar will not resolve overnight. I think there is probably a small light at the end of the tunnel,” Saleumxay added.
Myanmar has been prohibited from sending its foreign minister or any political representative to highlevel ASEAN meetings since the end of 2021, when it blocked the group’s envoy from meeting with Suu Kyi.
Instead, it has sent non-political representatives to lower-level working meetings, but has refused to send anyone to high-level meetings.
In Laos, however, it sent a nonpolitical foreign ministry official, ASEAN Permanent Secretary Marlar Than Htike, which Saleumxay called “a positive sign.”
ASEAN member nations Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam have a combined population of nearly 650 million and gross domestic product of more than $3 trillion.
Landlocked Laos, which has taken over this year’s rotating ASEAN leadership, is the bloc’s poorest nation and one of its smallest, and many have expressed skepticism about how much it can accomplish while the crises mount.
Still, it is the first ASEAN country that shares a border with Myanmar to serve as chair since the military took control of the country, giving it a perspective different from that of previous chairs.
Laos has already sent a special envoy to Myanmar for meetings with the head of the ruling military council and other top officials in an attempt to make progress on ASEAN’s “five-point consensus” plan for peace.