
ASEAN ministers push stalled peace plan in Myanmar talks
This handout photo from Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs taken on July 11, 2026 and released on July 12, 2026 shows Myanmar’s Foreign Minister U Tin Maung Swe (C) attending bilateral talks with Thailand’s Foreign M
This handout photo from Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs taken on July 11, 2026 and released on July 12, 2026 shows Myanmar’s Foreign Minister U Tin Maung Swe (C) attending bilateral talks with Thailand’s Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow (not pictured), a day before an informal meeting with ASEAN Foreign Ministers, in Bangkok. (Photo by Handout / THAILAND’S MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS / AFP) AFP Southeast Asian foreign ministers pressed their Myanmar counterpart for “concrete” progress on a stagnant ASEAN peace plan for the country during a meeting in Bangkok on Sunday, top Thai and Philippine diplomats said. The meeting between foreign ministers of several members of the 11-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and Myanmar’s Foreign Minister Tin Maung Swe was the first such gathering since a 2021 military coup in the country. Myanmar has been diplomatically sidelined within the regional bloc since the country’s military ousted the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi more than five years ago, triggering a civil war. But junta chief Min Aung Hlaing was installed as civilian president in April following highly restricted elections, and neighbouring Thailand has been leading attempts at normalising relations. Thai Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow told a press briefing on Sunday that his government supported “calibrated engagement” with Myanmar in an effort to implement ASEAN’s “five-point consensus” plan aimed at ending the war between the military and a coalition of pro-democracy rebels and ethnic minority armed groups. But he said it required Myanmar to address the concerns of ASEAN and the international community. “We have some concrete expectations” with regard to humanitarian assistance, reduction of violence, especially against civilians, and promoting inclusive political dialogue, Sihasak told reporters. He also urged “further release of political prisoners and further positive development” with regard to 81-year-old Suu Kyi, who remains detained after she was moved from prison to house arrest. “We want to see progress, step by step,” Sihasak said. – ‘Concrete actions’ – But ASEAN has made little headway with its initiative to end Myanmar’s civil war through dialogue with all sides. Myanmar lawmakers — elected in a vote that did not include rebel-controlled areas or Suu Kyi’s party — blasted the bloc’s plan in parliament last week, calling for it to be “reviewed and reconsidered”, the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar said. The plan “undermines Myanmar’s equality within ASEAN and is inconsistent with ASEAN’s fundamental principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of a member state”, they said, according to the outlet. Still, Philippines’ Foreign Secretary Theresa Lazaro said she and the bloc stood behind the plan. Lazaro, who is also the Myanmar special envoy of the ASEAN chair, told reporters that ministers at the meeting in Bangkok hoped Myanmar would take the “opportunity to make concrete and demonstrable progress or benchmarks on the core points of the five-point consensus” — although no timeline was set. “ASEAN called for concrete actions towards the cessation of hostilities,” she said, adding that she intended to visit Myanmar this year in an effort to expand access to humanitarian assistance in the country. The five-point plan, which Myanmar and the rest of ASEAN agreed to in 2021, calls for an immediate halt to hostilities and for dialogue between all parties, mediated by the ASEAN envoy. But consensus among ASEAN members is fraying, analysts say, between those open to seizing on small concessions to bring Myanmar back into the fold — a group led by Bangkok — and those maintaining a firmer stance. Thailand, the Philippines, Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam confirmed their foreign ministers’ attendance on Sunday, while Malaysia’s foreign minister told AFP he could not attend but sent other representatives. More than 100,000 people have been killed in Myanmar’s civil war, according to monitor group ACLED. The post ASEAN ministers push stalled peace plan in Myanmar talks appeared first on ENG.MIZZIMA.COM.
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直接の経済ニュースではありませんが、治安と司法の信頼は地域経済の土台です。職場での暴力や未成年者保護への不安が強まると、夜間営業、観光、雇用、地域サービス業のリスク認識が高まります。
投資家目線では、個別事件よりも法執行の予見可能性が焦点です。加害者への対応が曖昧になれば、ローカルビジネスの統治リスクや従業員保護の弱さとして評価されやすくなります。
ミャンマーで問われるのは、加害者個人だけでなく、雇用主、警察、近隣社会が被害のサインをどう扱ったかです。軍が声を上げたことで、事件は噂話ではなく、記録され検証される公共問題に変わります。
市民にとっては、自分や家族が被害に遭った時に公正な手続きへアクセスできるのかが最大の関心です。地域団体が声を上げることで、事件の風化を防ぎ、被害者側の孤立を和らげる意味があります。
背景・歴史的文脈
このニュースは、ミャンマーの地域社会で法の支配と弱者保護がどこまで機能しているかを映す事案です。暴力事件そのものに加え、女性団体や市民社会が司法手続きを求めて声を上げている点が重要です。軍政下では警察・司法への信頼が揺らぎやすく、個別事件が地域の不安や統治への不信に直結します。
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