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Myanmar Junta Criticizes ASEAN After Being Barred From its Meetings


FILE PHOTO: Myanmar's military junta spokesman Zaw Min Tun speaks  in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, March 23, 2021. On Wednesday, Myanmar's military leadership lashed out at the ASEAN grouping of Southeast Asian countries for excluding its generals from regional gatherings.
FILE PHOTO: Myanmar's military junta spokesman Zaw Min Tun speaks  in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, March 23, 2021. On Wednesday, Myanmar's military leadership lashed out at the ASEAN grouping of Southeast Asian countries for excluding its generals from regional gatherings.

Myanmar's military leadership on Wednesday lashed out at the ASEAN grouping of Southeast Asian countries for excluding its generals from regional gatherings, accusing it of caving to "external pressure."

Members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations have heaped condemnation on Myanmar's junta, which they say has failed to make concrete progress on a peace plan agreed to with the 10-nation bloc last year, including engaging with opponents and a cessation of hostilities.

Myanmar's military seized power from an elected government in a coup last year and has since then crushed dissent with lethal force. Most recently, the junta has been criticized for executing political activists and imprisoning Aung San Suu Kyi, the symbol of Myanmar's opposition and democracy movement.

ASEAN has barred Myanmar's generals from attending regional meetings, and some members said last month it would be forced to rethink the way forward unless the junta demonstrates progress on the peace plan.

The junta has declined offers to send non-political representatives instead to ASEAN meetings.

"If a seat representing a country is vacant, then it should not be labeled an ASEAN summit," junta spokesperson Zaw Min Tun said at a routine news conference on Wednesday, adding that Myanmar was working on implementing the peace plan.

"What they want is for us to meet and talk with the terrorists," he said, using the junta's label for pro-democracy movements that have taken up arms against the military.

He said ASEAN was violating its own policy of non-interference in a country's sovereign affairs while facing "external pressure," but did not elaborate.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cambodia, which is currently chairing ASEAN, did not address the accusation.

Ministry spokesperson Chum Sounry said ASEAN was "hopeful that the situation in Myanmar can be greatly improved, so that it can return as an indispensable member of our united ASEAN family again."

Several Western countries including the United States and Britain have imposed sanctions on Myanmar's junta over the coup.

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