Minister for Foreign Affairs Dr Vivian Balakrishnan's Written Reply to Parliamentary Question on ASEAN's Response to the Situation in Myanmar, 9 May 2023

09 May 2023

QUESTION

 

Mr Christopher de Souza: To ask the Minister for Foreign Affairs what is the ASEAN leadership intending to do in light of continued and increasing violence and human rights violations in Myanmar.

 

REPLY

 

ASEAN Chair Indonesia has strongly condemned the recent airstrikes by the Myanmar military, or Tatmadaw, in Sagaing Region, Myanmar on 11 April 2023. Singapore supports this statement. Any attack on civilians is reprehensible and cannot be condoned. Such acts of violence contradict the Five-Point Consensus formulated by the ASEAN Leaders and accepted by Senior General Min Aung Hlaing at their meeting on 24 April 2021 in Jakarta. Given the limited progress in the implementation of the Five-Point Consensus, the Leaders, at the ASEAN Summits in November 2022, agreed on a series of steps to send a clear signal to the Tatmadaw.

 

 

Indonesia has been engaging stakeholders to encourage inclusive dialogue in Myanmar. It has called for the cessation of violence and taken steps to facilitate humanitarian assistance to the people of Myanmar. Myanmar’s neighbours outside of ASEAN and our external partners, including the UN, also have important roles to play in working with ASEAN to address the crisis and facilitate national reconciliation in Myanmar. Nevertheless, the rate limiting factor for progress in the implementation of the Five-Point Consensus is not ASEAN or our external partners, but the stakeholders within Myanmar, especially the Tatmadaw. We should continue to press the Tatmadaw to cease violence and implement the Five-Point Consensus swiftly and fully.

 

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MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS

SINGAPORE

9 MAY 2023

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