‘History will judge us harshly’: Myanmar special envoy to the UN calls for tougher sanctions
- Sanctions on Myanmar’s military need to be tougher as the regime escalates violence on the ground, said Dr. Sasa, a special envoy to the United Nations.
- The Southeast Asian country has been in turmoil since the military seized power from a democratically elected government on Feb. 1.
- Sasa called on Russia and China to stop arms sales to the junta.
Sanctions on Myanmar’s military need to get tougher as the regime escalates violence on the ground, the country’s special envoy to the United Nations told CNBC this week.
“We need immediately international targeted, coordinated, tougher sanctions, both economically and diplomatically,” said Dr. Sasa.
Beyond punishing sanctions, the UN Security Council also needs to send a “unified and strong message” to stop this “crime against humanity” in Myanmar, he said.
The Southeast Asian country has been in turmoil since the military seized power from a democratically elected government on Feb. 1. Thousands have taken to the streets to protest against the coup for weeks, and more than 500 have died, according to advocacy group Assistance Association for Political Prisoners.
What they are doing is terrorizing 54 million … people of Myanmar every day, every moment, every second.Dr. SasaSPECIAL ENVOY TO THE UNITED NATIONS
Countries around the world have condemned the violence, while the U.S. and Europe have sanctioned individuals or companies related to the military.
‘Shame’ on the international community
Sasa also called on Russia and China to halt arms sales to Myanmar’s army.
“It’s very clear they should stop selling the weapons to Burmese military generals,” he told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Tuesday.
“What they are doing is terrorizing 54 million … people of Myanmar every day, every moment, every second,” he said.
He said Moscow and Beijing, which have close ties with the junta, have the power to stop the violence.
“It’s for them to decide right now,” Sasa said. Otherwise, it is a “shame” for the two countries, the international community and the UN Security Council, he said.
China and Russia, along with India and Vietnam, have helped to soften the UNSC’s criticism of the military regime. They requested that a UNSC statement remove references to a coup and the threat of further action.
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