PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Current ASEAN chair Cambodia warned Myanmar on Wednesday not to execute any more prisoners after the hanging of four people—two of them prominent pro-democracy figures—caused international outrage.
Foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) are discussing how to address the growing crisis in Myanmar at talks in Phnom Penh.
Related Stories
The 10-nation regional bloc has spearheaded so far fruitless efforts to restore peace to the country after a military coup last year, and anger is growing at the junta's stonewalling tactics.
Myanmar executed four prisoners last month in a move roundly condemned by ASEAN members, who are voicing increased frustration at the lack of progress on the bloc's "five-point consensus" plan on Myanmar's conflict.
Agreed in April last year, the plan calls for an immediate end to violence and dialogue between the army and coup opponents.
"If more prisoners are to be executed, we will be forced to rethink our role vis a vis ASEAN's five-point consensus," Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said as he opened the foreign ministers' gathering.
Hun Sen said the bloc was "disappointed and disturbed by the execution of these opposition activists despite the appeals from me and others for the death sentences to be reconsidered for the sake of political dialogue, peace and reconciliation".
Suspension threat
Malaysia, which has led efforts to get tough on Myanmar's junta, told reporters there must be progress before the ASEAN leaders summit in November.
"If there is no progress, then the leaders will have to ask the hard questions when they meet in November," said Malaysian Foreign Minister Saifuddin Abdullah, adding that suspending Myanmar from the regional bloc was not off the table.
He also described the Myanmar executions—which came despite personal appeals from Hun Sen—akin to "a slap".
"They are making a mockery of the five-point consensus, there is no respect to the ASEAN leaders, there is no respect to the ASEAN chair," he told reporters.
His comments were echoed by Indonesia's Retno Marsudi, who said there was "no significant progress".
"There's no goodwill and no commitment from the junta to implement the five-point plan," the foreign minister told reporters.
She added certain countries were frustrated by "broken promises" by the junta, and Hun Sen told foreign ministers that "ASEAN shouldn't be held hostage to Myanmar".
But with no representatives from Myanmar present for the summit—highlighted by the country's prominently placed empty chair—Cambodia's ASEAN spokesman admitted Tuesday that progress over the conflict might be tricky.
The February coup has left Myanmar in disarray, with the death toll from a brutal military crackdown on dissent passing 2,100, according to a local monitoring group.