Vientiane, Laos — Australia’s foreign minister on Saturday called on Myanmar’s junta to “take a different path” from its bloody crackdown on dissent, saying the situation in the war-torn country is “not sustainable”.
Penny Wong made the comments at an Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) foreign ministers meeting, where the crisis in Myanmar has divided the bloc.
Weeks after it seized power in February 2021 and launched a crackdown on dissent the junta agreed to a five-point peace plan with ASEAN but has failed to implement it.
“Myanmar is deeply concerning, we see it in the economy, instability, insecurity, deaths,” Wong told the media. “The message I want to send to the military regime is ‘this is not sustainable for you and your people’.
“We urge them to take a different path and reflect the five-point consensus.”
The junta has been barred from high-level ASEAN meetings.
It had previously refused to send “non-political representatives” but two senior bureaucrats are representing the country at the talks in Vientiane.
A Southeast Asian diplomat told AFP on condition of anonymity earlier this week that the military’s readiness to re-engage diplomatically was a sign of its “weakened position”.
In recent weeks the anti-regime Brotherhood Alliance has renewed Operation 1027 against the junta in northern Shan state, seizing territory along a vital highway to China.
Myanmar’s generals have yet to make any meaningful counterattack following a previous offensive by armed groups in October that seized swaths of territory along the border with China.
The losses triggered rare public criticism of its top leadership.
ASEAN has made diplomatic efforts to resolve the crisis but with little success.
Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines have called for tougher action against the junta, while Thailand has held its own bilateral talks with the generals as well as detained democracy leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
The conflict in Myanmar has forced 2.7 million people from their homes since the coup in 2021, according to the United Nations.