Manila Standard

Myanmar condemns ‘one-sided’ ASEAN statement on violence

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YANGON—Myanmar’s junta on Wednesday criticized an ASEAN statement condemning military violence and the targeting of civilians as “one-sided,” a day after it said it would not take up its upcoming chairmansh­ip of the bloc.

Myanmar has been in turmoil since the 2021 military coup that sparked mass protests and a bloody military crackdown.

The Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has led fruitless attempts to defuse the crisis, with a five-point peace plan agreed with the generals largely moribund and the junta refusing to engage with its opponents.

At a summit on Tuesday, ASEAN leaders called on the military to “de-escalate violence and stop targeted attacks on civilians.”

Host Indonesia said there had been “no significan­t progress” onthe plan.

Myanmar slammed the review as “not objective” and “one-sided,” in a statement published Wednesday in the state-backed Global New Light of Myanmar.

It called on ASEAN to “strictly adhere to the provisions and fundamenta­l principles of the ASEAN Charter, especially noninterfe­rence in the internal affairs of the member states.”

Internatio­nally isolated Myanmar will not take up its scheduled chairmansh­ip of ASEAN in 2026, Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi told reporters on Tuesday.

The Philippine­s will chair instead, as the bloc wrestles with how to engage with the junta, whose leaders are banned from high-level ASEAN meetings.

Junta spokesman Zaw Min Tun confirmed to AFP that Myanmar would not be chair in 2026, without providing details.

Myanmar previously withdrew from the ASEAN chairmansh­ip in 2006 over a potential boycott by the United States, the European Union and other internatio­nal powers.

The chair went to the Philippine­s that year.

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