Asean must ‘push for change’ in Myanmar: Top EU rights official

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International monitors have dismissed Myanmar's upcoming election as a ploy to legitimise continuing military rule.

International monitors have dismissed Myanmar’s upcoming election as a ploy to legitimise continuing military rule.

PHOTO: AFP

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- The European Union will not send observers to Myanmar’s upcoming election in late December, its top human rights official Kajsa Ollongren said on Oct 17, dismissing the vote as neither free nor fair and urging South-east Asian nations to push for change.

Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing has touted

the Dec 28 election

as a path to reconciliation in the civil war he sparked by snatching power in a 2021 coup.

But international monitors, including a UN expert and Amnesty International, have dismissed the vote as a ploy to legitimise continuing military rule.

“We’re calling upon all neighbouring countries, including the Asean countries, to really firmly push for a change of course,” said Ms Ollongren.

“As long as Myanmar is unstable, as long as it’s sort of a source of instability for the whole region, it should be the number one concern... for the Asean countries,” she told AFP in an interview in the Malaysian capital.

Ms Ollongren’s call comes ahead of a major Asean summit in Kuala Lumpur next week, where the issue of

sending election observers

to represent the 10-nation bloc is expected to be discussed.

Asean has been battling to implement

a five-point plan

, which calls, among other issues, for an immediate ceasefire.

Malaysia is the 2025 rotating chair of Asean – long derided by critics as a toothless talking shop – and calls at previous summits and meetings earlier for an end to fighting have yielded little effect.

Myanmar’s vote will be blocked in huge enclaves of the country captured by an array of pro-democracy guerillas and long-active ethnic minority armies that have found common cause fighting the junta.

Naypyitaw has already conceded that elections will not take place in one in seven national Parliament constituencies, many of them active war zones, while martial law remains in place in one in five townships.

The planned vote was “not free and fair by the way it is being organised”, Ms Ollongren said.

“That means that we cannot recognise these as real elections, as fair.

“Therefore, based on these criteria, we will not send observers to something that we don’t recognise as an election,” she said. AFP

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