Request for talks with Aung San Suu Kyi rejected

Request for talks with Aung San Suu Kyi rejected
Aung San Suu Kyi speaks at a meeting with government authorities, members of civil society and the diplomatic corps during Pope Francis’ visit in 2017. Photo: CNS

(UCAN): Myanmar’s military junta rejected a request by former Cambodian prime minister, Hun Sen, for talks with ousted leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been detained since she was ousted by a coup in early 2021 [Sunday Examiner, 7 February 2021] which plunged the nation into civil war.

Spokesperson, Zaw Min Tun, said in an audio message that there was “no reason to facilitate [talks] at this moment” while the junta was focusing on promised elections.

“We are going to avoid matters which can delay or disturb future processes,” the message said, according to a dispatch from AFP.

Hun Sen requested the talks during a video conference with Myanmar’s embattled junta chief, General Min Aung Hlaing, on May 7 which was held following discussions with the military’s diplomatic envoy in Phnom Penh.

Tun also lashed out at former Thai prime minister, Thaksin Shinawatra—a close friend and former economic advisor to Hun Sen—after he reportedly held talks with some ethnic armed organisations who are battling the junta.

“We assume that encouraging terrorist groups which destroy Myanmar interests is not appropriate,” Tun said.

The ASEAN and its five-point peace plan for Myanmar have been sharply criticised for their inability to negotiate with all sides in the conflict

Hun Sen ruled Cambodia for almost 40 years before transferring power to his eldest son last August.

His request for talks with Suu Kyi followed a call by Thailand that a troika be established within the Association of South East Asian Nations [ASEAN] to negotiate with the warring parties.

The troika would consist of Indonesia which held ASEAN’s rotating chair last year, the current chair Laos, and Malaysia which will take over in 2025.

The ASEAN and its five-point peace plan for Myanmar have been sharply criticised for their inability to negotiate with all sides in the conflict. However, a renewed push for negotiations has emerged after six months of battlefield gains by the ethnic armed organisations and the People’s Defence Force, the armed wing of the shadow National Unity Government.

Defence Force, with Suu Kyi as head, and the ethnic organisations are in control of nearly all of Myanmar’s borders, although speculation is mounting that the junta is planning a counteroffensive aimed at winning back lost territory.

About three million people have been displaced by the three-year-old conflict, according to the latest numbers from the United Nations, and around half have been forced to flee since November.

“Myanmar stands at the precipice in 2024 with a deepening humanitarian crisis,” the office of the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Myanmar said in a statement on May 6, adding an estimated one-third of the displaced were children.

About half of all internally displaced people are in the northwestern regions of Chin, Magway and Sagaing, more than 900,000 are in the southeast and a further 356,000 people have fled their homes in the western state of Rakhine, the UN office said.

Myanmar’s military junta justified its coup by claiming elections held in November 2020 were rigged and that its ousting of Suu Kyi would herald a fresh vote, which has so far failed to materialise.

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