Junta boss Min Aung Hlaing meets leaders in Bangkok as his military restrict humanitarian relief efforts
This is not a good look for anyone, but Thailand, at least, has a reputation to uphold.
“The Thai government professes to be democratic,” former Thailand foreign minister Kasit Piromya told this masthead, listing the reasons why inviting the general was a mistake.
“Second, Thailand is a member at the moment of the UN Human Rights Council [as of late last year].
“Third, Thailand is committed to the joint decision of the ASEAN leaders not to invite military and political figures of the Myanmar junta to attend any of the official meetings and so on. What the Thai government did is against all the commitments, principles and international norms, ignoring altogether the decency of the international community.”
For good measure, Min Aung Hlaing is accused of crimes against humanity for the deportation and persecution of the Rohingya Muslim ethnic group in the second half of 2017. For this, prosecutors at the International Criminal Court last year sought a warrant for his arrest.
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Still, Paetongtarn not only invited Min Aung Hlaing and his offsiders, but she also met with him on the BIMSTEC sidelines. Why? Amid fury from the human rights groups, the government has been quiet about its reasons.
The earthquake was a big topic, surely. Thailand’s The Nation news site reported the pair discussed cross-border crimes, drugs, PM2.5 air pollution and flood-prevention measures – the kinds of things two legitimate heads of state might.
We also know Thailand and Myanmar have been pressured by China to crack down on the human-trafficking trade that is feeding scam compounds on Myanmar’s side of the Moei River border.
Paetongtarn visited Chinese President Xi Jinping in early February and has shown a willingness to work closely with Beijing – the Myanmar regime’s most important backer. Weeks after her visit, she deported to China more than 40 people from the persecuted Uyghur ethnic minority who had been detained in Thailand since 2014.
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Meanwhile, the United States, an ally of Thailand, has withdrawn further into its “America First” silo under President Donald Trump.
Min Aung Hlaing’s attendance at BIMSTEC could feasibly be an opportunity for regional leaders to pressure him for a peace process and to allow unfettered humanitarian aid into earthquake-stricken regions.
But this was not how it was being received by the regime’s internal and international opponents. Like The Global New Light of Myanmar, they saw the trip as a victory for Min Aung Hlaing. From the tragedy of the earthquake, the junta appeared to be seizing a public relations and political opportunity to wave in front of citizens wearied by calamity.