Southeast Asian foreign ministers will hold emergency talks in Jakarta next week to discuss strife-torn Myanmar ahead of the Asean leaders’ summit in Phnom Penh in November, diplomatic sources confirmed on Friday.
Myanmar has been in chaos since a putsch in February last year, with more than 2,300 killed in the military’s brutal crackdown on dissent, according to a local monitoring group.
Asean has spearheaded so far fruitless efforts to resolve the crisis, and the bloc is frustrated by escalating human rights atrocities — including the execution of four political prisoners and a recent air strike on a school that killed 14 people, 12 of them children.
There has been little progress on a five-point plan agreed to at a meeting in April last year that included junta chief Min Aung Hlaing. It called for an end to violence, increased humanitarian aid, as well as dialogue between the military and the anti-coup movement.
An Indonesian foreign ministry official confirmed a meeting is scheduled for Thursday at the Asean Secretariat in Jakarta.
The talks are expected to review progress on the plan.
“A special meeting is now needed as there are specific issues that will be looked into further before the leaders’ meeting,” the official told AFP.
“The Myanmar junta doesn’t show any desire or concrete steps for implementation (of the plan).”
The official noted that any potential suspension of Myanmar’s Asean membership would not be an easy process.
Another diplomatic source told AFP that Article 7 of the Asean charter, which allows the 10-country bloc’s leaders to address an emergency situation, would be the basis for action.
Cambodian Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn — who is a special envoy to Myanmar as part of his country’s role as the Asean chair — will chair Thursday’s meeting.
Chum Sounry, the Cambodian foreign ministry spokesman, told AFP a team had been sent to Myanmar to discuss concrete action and the envoy’s third visit to the country — originally slated for September.
“We are now waiting for a response from the Myanmar side,” he said.
Min Aung Hlaing has not been invited to the Asean leaders’ summit — for the second year in a row — and Myanmar’s top diplomat Wunna Maung Lwin was excluded from ministerial talks in February and August.