Russian President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with junta chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing during their meeting at the Grand Kremlin Palace in Moscow on March 4. (AFP)

Putin hails Myanmar ties as junta chief visits Moscow

By AFP

President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday praised Russia’s developing ties with Myanmar, during a visit by the Asian country’s junta chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing to its key ally.

Russia is a crucial arms supplier to the isolated state, which is struggling to quell violent opposition to the junta’s military rule.

“The relations between our countries are steadily developing,” Putin told Min Aung Hlaing in a televised meeting at the Kremlin.

“We have great potential,” he said, hailing growing trade ties.

Putin focused on a plan for Russia to help build a small nuclear plant in Myanmar, which he said would supply the country with “cheap and ecologically safe energy” that would boost its economy and create thousands of jobs.

The two sides on Tuesday signed a memorandum about cooperating on the construction of a plant with a capacity of 110 megawatts that could be increased to 330 megawatts, TASS state news agency reported, citing the Rosatom state nuclear corporation.

Russia and Myanmar in 2023 signed an initial agreement on nuclear cooperation and the possible construction of such a plant.

The head of Rosatom, Mr Alexei Likhachev, told Russian television Tuesday that Myanmar was interested in building a modular station with two reactors close to the capital Nay Pyi Taw.

Min Aung Hlaing, who seized power in a 2021 coup, saluted Putin as a “king” and backed Moscow’s full-scale military offensive on Ukraine.

“I believe that victory must be yours under your strong and decisive leadership,” he told Putin.

Both countries are under heavy Western sanctions – Myanmar following the 2021 coup and Russia after its 2014 annexation of Crimea and its ongoing three-year-long offensive on Ukraine.

Russia exports some raw materials and fertilisers to Myanmar, and both sides have talked up the prospect of deepening economic ties alongside their military and political alliance.

Myanmar last year imported about 90 percent of its oil from Russia, which was a “reliable” supplier, Putin said.

Moscow’s support has become vital to Myanmar’s military – particularly the air force – as it battles an array of ethnic armed groups and pro-democracy guerrillas on multiple fronts.

The junta suffered significant territorial losses after a 2023 offensive but its air power has been pivotal to arresting the advance of opposition forces.

Russia has sought to boost relations with anti-Western governments, particularly in Asia and Africa, since ordering troops into Ukraine in February 2022.

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