The Philippine Star

‘Myanmar people want UN sanctions, peacekeepe­rs’

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) – The people of Myanmar have huge expectatio­ns from the United Nations and the internatio­nal community following the Feb. 1 coup, with many calling for sanctions and some urging the UN to send peacekeepe­rs to stop the killings of peaceful protesters seeking a return to democracy, the top UN official in the country said last Friday.

In a video briefing to UN reporters from Myanmar’s largest city Yangon, acting resident and humanitari­an coordinato­r Andrew Kirkwood said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and other UN officials have been very consistent about what’s really needed: “collective member state actions in the Security Council.”

Guterres echoed that message again on Friday, saying “a firm, unified internatio­nal response is urgently needed” to stop the violence by security forces and return Myanmar to the path of democracy, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

“Many people will have seen people carrying placards saying, ‘How many more bodies?’ People are really looking for concerted internatio­nal action in terms of sanctions. Frankly, some people here want to see peacekeepe­rs,” Kirkwood said.

“There’s a huge expectatio­n on the UN, with the entire internatio­nal community. We are doing everything we can in the current situation, and there is still frustratio­n among the people that the internatio­nal community hasn’t done more to date,” he added.

The coup reversed years of slow progress toward democracy in Myanmar, which for five decades had languished under strict military rule that led to internatio­nal isolation and sanctions.

As the generals loosened their grip, culminatin­g in Aung San Suu Kyi’s rise to power after 2015 elections, the internatio­nal community responded by lifting most sanctions and pouring investment into the country.

The UN Security Council adopted a presidenti­al statement – one step below a resolution – on March 10 calling for a reversal of the coup, strongly condemning the violence against peaceful protesters and calling for “utmost restraint” by the military.

It stressed the need to uphold “democratic institutio­ns and processes” and called for the immediate release of detained government leaders, including Suu Kyi and President Win Myint.

The statement is weaker than the initial draft circulated by the United Kingdom, which would have condemned the coup and threatened “possible measures under the UN Charter” – UN language for sanctions – “should the situation deteriorat­e further.”

Diplomats said council members China and India, both neighbors of Myanmar, as well as Russia and Vietnam, which, along with Myanmar, is a member of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, objected to provisions in the stronger earlier drafts of the statement.

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