Gulf News

A FEW FRIENDS FOR MYANMAR’S MILITARY REGIME

Asean will have to engage with junta in Naypyidaw to find a peaceful solution

- BY SAJJAD ASHRAF| Special to Gulf News

Three years after the February 2021 military takeover in Myanmar, the military is yet to consolidat­e its authority. The junta leader Senior General Min Aung Hlaing is facing increasing resistance within and isolation abroad. The regime now finds itself confrontin­g the ethnic groups, who have been fighting the military regime for decades.

The Three Brotherhoo­d Alliance, as they are known is made up of well-trained soldiers from the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Arm, the Ta’ang National Liberation Army and the Arakan Army.

The general’s once unassailab­le military is now gradually shrinking back into central Myanmar heartlands. Notwithsta­nding this loss of territory to the resistance, the regime’s fall is not imminent.

The violence has nonetheles­s badly dented the junta’s authority. It is left with a few friends internatio­nally. Cracks seem to be appearing among the ultranatio­nalist Buddhist support for General Min Aung Hlaing. A prominent monk recently called upon the junta’s second in command Soe Win to take over because, “the military is collapsing.”

The coup has backfired badly driving away a decade of democratic gains. Internatio­nal agencies and support were coming and Myanmar economy was on road to recovery. All this despite the constituti­on where the army had a veto over all civilian policy.

General Min insists that new elections will be held. Few believe him after he annulled the last one swept by National League for Democracy under Aung San Suu Kyi, citing unproven allegation of voter fraud. In reality, they dissolved the government fearing that the new assembly might clip their power and privileges.

The generals best hope may still be negotiatin­g with Suu Kyi, the 78-year-old democracy figurehead, who accepted the army’s hand in power to become the country’s de facto leader before the coup.

But even if she agrees to negotiate again with the military, her clout among the pro-democracy movement has lessened. While she retains considerab­le respect for her years in detention championin­g democracy, the new generation is unlikely to acquiesce to military’s role in a future democratic dispensati­on.

While the military and the resistance slug it out, the humanitari­an crises is deepening. Around 18.6 million people — one-third of the Myanmar population — will likely need humanitari­an assistance in 2024. As of January, about 2.6 million people are internally displaced in the country. The World Bank has projected that Myanmar’s GDP will grow by just 1 per cent in 2024.

The Asean of which Myanmar is a member, has until now been unable to persuade the Myanmar junta to live up to the Asean’s 5-point commitment, to which General Min agreed at the special Jakarta Summit in 2021.

As the turbulence in Myanmar increases, Asean will have to proactivel­y involve itself, assert its common position agreed with the generals, and give them a way out.

Sajjad Ashraf was a member of the Pakistan Foreign Service from 1973 to 2008 and served as an ambassador to several countries.

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