Thai PM meets Myanmar junta chief on sidelines of summit in China
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Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra hinted at Thailand’s support for the Myanmar junta’s proposed election in 2025.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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KUNMING, China – Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra met Myanmar’s junta chief on the sidelines of a regional summit in China on Nov 7, in a rare overseas trip by a general grappling with a civil war at home.
Myanmar’s ruling military has been battling against a rebellion that erupted after it seized power in a 2021 coup,
“We had a private conversation and there was nothing unexpected,” Ms Paetongtarn said of her meeting with General Min Aung Hlaing during an interview with Thai reporters. “I offered our goodwill to cultivate peace.”
The two countries share a 2,000km border, and fighting in Myanmar has sometimes spilled into Thailand and disrupted border trade.
Ms Paetongtarn during an Asean summit in Laos in October called for heightened engagement with Myanmar, stressing there was “no military solution” and that it was “time to start talking”.
She also hinted at Thailand’s support for the junta’s proposed election in 2025
The election, which opposition groups have either been barred from or refuse to contest, has been widely dismissed as a sham and is unlikely to be recognised by western governments.
On Nov 7, Ms Paetongtarn said Myanmar’s conflict was an internal affair, which it must manage, according to Thai media.
The two leaders were attending summits of the Greater Mekong Subregion and the Ayeyawady-Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy in Kunming.
Gen Min Aung Hlaing is barred from Asean summits over the lack of progress on an Asean-led peace plan and his overseas trips have been few, mainly to Russia, a supporter of Myanmar’s military and key supplier of its arms.
His visit to influential neighbour China is his first since the 2021 coup.
He met Chinese Premier Li Qiang

