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Recognising Myanmar junta won’t stop violence, says outgoing UN envoy

Christine Schraner Burgener, special envoy of the United Nations Secretary General on Myanmar, last week said that Myanmar had spiraled into civil war, the chance to return to democracy was disappearing and the military had ‘no interest’ in compromise or dialogue. — Picture by Yoshio Tsunoda/AFLO via Reuters

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NEW YORK, Oct 26 — Recognising Myanmar’s junta as the country’s government would not stop growing violence, the outgoing United Nations special envoy on Myanmar said yesterday, warning such a move would push the country toward instability and becoming a failed state.

“I hope that the international community will not give up,” Christine Schraner Burgener, who finishes up this weekend after more than three years in the role, told Reuters. “We should stand with the people.”

Protests and unrest have paralysed Myanmar since the February 1 coup, with the military accused of atrocities and excessive force against civilians, though the junta blames the unrest on “terrorists” allied with a shadow government.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres yesterday appointed Noeleen Heyzer of Singapore, a former senior UN diplomat, as his new special envoy on Myanmar.

Schraner Burgener last week said that Myanmar had spiraled into civil war, the chance to return to democracy was disappearing and the military had “no interest” in compromise or dialogue. The junta pushed back yesterday and said her comments were far from reality and reflected a UN bias.

“The violence will not stop if somebody would accept the SAC as a legal government — violence will not stop,” Schraner Burgener, referring to the State Administrative Council (SAC), as Myanmar’s junta is known, said yesterday.

The diplomat from Switzerland said a “real, honest dialogue” was needed among all parties, but for that to happen Myanmar military leader Min Aung Hlaing would first need to be replaced by “somebody who is more constructive.”

Southeast Asian leaders are set to meet this week, but without Min Aung Hlaing — a rare exclusion by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) bloc, usually known for non-interference.

“No one in the region has an interest to recognise the SAC because that would mean going towards a failed state, instability, not only in Myanmar, but also in the region,” said Schraner Burgener.

The United Nations is also faced with rival claims on who will sit in Myanmar’s seat at the world body.

A decision by member states — described as “crucial” by Schraner Burgener — is due to be made by the end of the year on whether the junta or current Ambassador Kyaw Moe Tun, appointed by Aung San Suu Kyi’s ousted elected government, should represent the country in New York. — Reuters

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