Senior General Min Aung Hlaing (L) is greeted on his arrival at Jakarta's Soekarno-Hatta international airport on April 24 to attend a Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit on the Myanmar crisis. (Indonesian Presidential Palace / AFP)
Senior General Min Aung Hlaing (L) is greeted on his arrival at Jakarta's Soekarno-Hatta international airport on April 24 to attend a Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit on the Myanmar crisis. (Indonesian Presidential Palace / AFP)

Min Aung Hlaing lands in Jakarta for ASEAN crisis talks

Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing arrived in the Indonesian capital today for crisis talks with Southeast Asian leaders, in his first foreign trip since the February 1 coup.

By AFP

Southeast Asian leaders will hold Myanmar crisis talks today with Senior General 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 Association of Southeast Asian Nations meeting in Jakarta is the senior general’s first foreign trip since the Tatmadaw staged a coup that ousted the elected government of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1.

Mass protests by an angry population have been met by a brutal crackdown that has left blood on the streets, while conflict has re-erupted between the military and several ethnic armed groups in the borderlands. Myanmar’s top civilian leaders are in hiding or under house arrest.

United Nations special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar Mr Tom Andrews has said an estimated 250,000 people have been displaced in recent months.

An Indonesian government video showed Min Aung Hlaing, dressed in a dark suit, stepping off a Myanmar Airways International plane after it landed in the capital today.

He will join 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 10-country group, which also includes Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines and Laos.

Dozens gathered outside the ASEAN headquarters, which was ringed by heavy security, calling for democracy to be restored. 

A diplomatic source told AFP that ASEAN was likely to call on the junta to end violence against civilians and to allow a special envoy to meet with the detained Aung San Suu Kyi, but would stop short of calling for her release.

The meeting is closed to media.

‘Murderer-in-chief’

The general’s involvement has angered activists, human rights groups and a National Unity Government formed this month by ousted Myanmar lawmakers and various ethnic leaders.

“Meetings that contribute to a solution to the deepening crisis in Myanmar are welcome,” said the NUG, which was not invited to the meeting despite its demand for recognition as Myanmar’s legitimate government. 

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

The NUG 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.

“The Indonesian authorities are duty-bound to investigate Senior General Min Aung Hlaing and other Myanmar military officials who may join his delegation to Jakarta,” it added.

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

‘Be realistic’

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

Few analysts expect major breakthroughs from the meeting, saying instead it is 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 full-blown plan on how to get Myanmar out of the conflict,” said Mustafa Izzuddin, senior international affairs analyst at Solaris Strategies Singapore.

“But rather I think it will start the conversation and perhaps lay the parameters as to how a resolution could be found.”

UN special envoy for Myanmar, Christine Schraner Burgener, is expected on the sidelines of the summit.

While the European Union and Washington have ramped up sanctions against Myanmar to force the military’s hand, “ASEAN wants to embrace [Myanmar] so it can create and safeguard peace in Southeast Asia,” said Beginda Pakpahan, an international relations expert at the University of Indonesia.

“The second objective is to find a long-term solution through constructive engagement.”

But the crisis engulfing Myanmar has delivered a big challenge to the future of the bloc and its consensus-driven approach.

“This summit is really a test of ASEAN’s credibility not just within the region but also outside of the region,” Izzuddin said.

“International eyes are on [it] to see whether the regional approach that ASEAN has taken to find a resolution in Myanmar is effective.”

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