ASEAN Announces its Failure with Planned Junta Engagement

July 11th, 2026  •  Category Statements

11 July 2026: ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ scheduled meeting with the Myanmar junta’s “foreign minister” in Bangkok on Sunday would undermine ASEAN’s own Five-Point Consensus (5PC) and reward the junta’s bloodshed and recalcitrance.

It will embolden the junta even more to commit atrocities while gifting it the legitimacy it needs to survive, says the Special Advisory Council for Myanmar (SAC-M).

“By so totally compromising itself, ASEAN stands on the precipice of irrelevance,” said SAC-M member Yanghee Lee.

For more than five years, accused war criminal and junta leader Min Aung Hlaing has treated ASEAN with open contempt. For all its shortcomings, ASEAN’s 5PC remains the only framework through which the bloc has agreed to address Myanmar’s junta-induced crises.

In 2021, ASEAN took the commendable step of barring Min Aung Hlaing and senior junta officials from high-level meetings as punishment for reneging on the 5PC.

Just two weeks ago, the junta rejected a request by the Philippines’ Secretary of Foreign Affairs and Special Envoy of the ASEAN Chair on Myanmar, Ma. Theresa Lazaro, to meet with detained State Counsellor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.  In response, the Philippines, as ASEAN Chair, asserted that the release of all political prisoners was “essential to advancing meaningful political dialogue as envisioned in the 5PC”.

Now, without extracting a single concession from the junta, Secretary Lazaro has announced that ASEAN Foreign Ministers will meet with the junta’s “foreign minister” this weekend.

This inexplicable backflip exposes the folly of ASEAN’s constant negotiations against itself while Myanmar burns and the junta entrenches itself. Since Min Aung Hlaing declared himself “president” on 10 April 2026 off the back of illegitimate elections, he has intensified a nationwide atrocity campaign that has killed tens of thousands of civilians and displaced millions. Some 22,375 civilians remain in junta arbitrary detention.

There is still time for Secretary Lazaro to cancel the meeting and to maintain ASEAN’s ban on engagement with junta officials under the 5PC’s framework, specifically its demands for an immediate end to the junta’s violence, the unconditional release of all political prisoners, and the unimpeded delivery of humanitarian assistance to all of those in need.

If ASEAN goes ahead with the meeting this weekend, it is casting a vote of no-confidence in its own ability to handle the situation in Myanmar. It is also burning any remaining goodwill with legitimate actors, including the Steering Council for the Emergence of a Federal Democratic Union, the National Unity Government, ethnic organisations, minority communities and Myanmar civil society.

By so completely abandoning its expressed commitment to supporting the will and aspirations of the Myanmar people, ASEAN would send a clear message to the international community: we have failed, over to you.