New Straits Times

EU MULLS SANCTIONS ON MYANMAR

UN report in August, US sanctions on military units put onus on bloc to act

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THE European Union is considerin­g trade sanctions on Myanmar over the Rohingya crisis, potentiall­y stripping the country of tariff-free access to the world’s largest trading bloc, three EU officials said.

The sanctions, under discussion at the European Commission, would include Myanmar’s lucrative textile industry and potentiall­y put at risk thousands of jobs there but would not come into effect immediatel­y, giving the EU leverage to stop what the West says is ethnic cleansing of Muslim Rohingya.

Even by triggering a six-month review process on whether to impose trade sanctions, which could be reversed if Myanmar met humanitari­an and democratic targets, the bloc would mark a significan­t shift in policy.

The impetus for the move was a United Nations report in August, which accused Myanmar’s military of carrying out killings of Rohingya with “genocidal intent”. That, and the rare United States step of putting sanctions on two entire military units, have put an onus on the EU to act, officials said.

“We are concerned about the impact on the population from our potential measures, but we cannot ignore a UN report describing the military campaign as genocide,” said one EU official of the debate within the European Commission, the EU executive responsibl­e for the bloc’s trade policy.

Until now, the EU has imposed travel bans and asset freezes on several members of the

Myanmar military, but has shied away from slapping sanctions on Myanmar’s commander-in-chief, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, who the UN said should be prosecuted along with five others for genocide and crimes against humanity.

Myanmar has rejected the UN findings as “one-sided”. It says military action which followed militant attacks on security forces in August last year was a legitimate counterins­urgency operation.

Myanmar government spokes-man Zaw Htay did not answer telephone calls seeking comment on the possible EU move on Wednesday. He said last month he would no longer speak to the media over the phone, only at a biweekly conference. EU officials believe the formal threat of losing tariff-free access would quickly hit foreign investment in the apparel industry, where European manufactur­ers take advantage of relatively low labour costs in Myanmar.

“Removing this duty-free access is a measure of last resort, but we must act if other measures are not delivering,” said one EU official.

“In light of the deteriorat­ing situation on the ground, the Commission is currently assessing possible ways of escalating its political and economic response,” a Commission source said.

European firms sourcing apparel from Myanmar include retailers Adidas, C&A, H&M, Inditex, Next and Primark.

 ??  ?? Senior General Min Aung Hlaing
Senior General Min Aung Hlaing

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