Muscat Daily

Southeast Asian leaders meet for Myanmar talks

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Jakarta, Indonesia - Southeast Asian leaders held Myanmar crisis talks on Saturday with junta leader Min Aung Hlaing who has become the focus of internatio­nal outrage over a military coup and crackdown that has left more than 700 dead.

The meeting of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Jakarta is the senior general’s first foreign trip since security forces staged a coup that ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi in early February.

Mass protests by an angry population have been met by a brutal crackdown that has left blood on the streets.

An estimated 250,000 people have been displaced, according to a UN envoy, with Myanmar’s democratic­ally elected top leaders in hiding or under house arrest.

The senior general joined Indonesian President Joko Widodo and the Sultan of Brunei, the current chair of ASEAN, as well as leaders and foreign ministers from most of the ten country group, which also includes Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippine­s and Laos.

Small protests outside the bloc’s Jakarta headquarte­rs were dispersed by security personnel.

The text of a speech delivered by Malaysian leader Muhyiddin Yassin called for an immediate end to violence against civilians, the release of political prisoners and for the ASEAN chair and secretary general to be granted ‘access into Myanmar, including to all the parties concerned’.

‘The deplorable situation in Myanmar must stop immediatel­y,’ the draft read.

‘Malaysia believes the killings and violence must end. All parties must urgently restraint from any provocatio­ns and actions that will perpetuate violence and unrest.’

‘Murderer-in-chief’

symbolise detainees - to all across commercial hub Yangon.

Some more creative protests included Yangon demonstrat­ors staging a socalled ‘funeral’ for the senior general by smashing saffroncol­oured clay pots on the ground - symbolic of cutting ties with the dead.

The general’s involvemen­t has angered activists, human rights groups and a shadow government of ousted Myanmar lawmakers, which was not invited to the talks.

‘Meetings that contribute to a solution to the deepening crisis in Myanmar are welcome,’ the latter said in a statement.

‘(But) meetings that exclude the people of Myanmar but include murderer-in-chief Min Aung Hlaing... are unlikely to be helpful.’

The lawmakers called on the junta to ‘stop murdering civilians’, release more than 3,000 political prisoners and return power to the country’s democratic­ally elected government.

‘The crisis initiated by a murderous and unrepentan­t Myanmar military has engulfed the country, and will cause severe aftershock­s - humanitari­an and more - for the entire region,’ rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal said ahead of the meeting.

There have also been calls for the regional bloc to expel Myanmar.

In Myanmar, protesters continued to take to the streets on Saturday, from northern Kachin state - where demonstrat­ors wore blue shirts to

‘Be realistic’

But ASEAN generally takes a hands-off approach to members’ internal affairs.

Few analysts expected major breakthrou­ghs from the meeting, saying instead it was a chance to bring Myanmar’s military to the bargaining table and pave the way for a possible resolution.

“We have to be realistic here. I don’t think the summit is going to bear out a fullblown plan on how to get Myanmar out of the conflict,” Mustafa Izzuddin, senior internatio­nal affairs analyst at Solaris Strategies Singapore, said before the talks.

 ?? (AFP) ?? The ASEAN leaders attend the bloc’s summit on the Myanmar crisis, in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta on Saturday
(AFP) The ASEAN leaders attend the bloc’s summit on the Myanmar crisis, in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta on Saturday

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