Asean summit begins without Myanmar's junta leader

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Asean summit begins without Myanmar's junta leader

A summit of south-east Asian leaders has begun without a representative from Myanmar after its junta leader was excluded for failure to follow a regional peace deal and the ruling military refused to send junior representation.

Neither Brunei, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Asean Chair, nor the bloc s secretary-general made a mention of the no-show in opening remarks at the virtual meeting.

Asean decided to remove junta chief Min Aung Hlaing, who ousted a civilian government on 1 February, over his failure to implement a peace process he agreed with Asean in April to end the country s bloody crisis.

The move was a regional step by a rare bold grouping known for its non-interference and engagement.

Brunei had said the bloc would invite a non-political representative from Myanmar, but there was no confirmation of this by the opening of the summit.

Myanmar s junta late on Monday said it would only agree to its head of state or ministerial representative attending the summit, indicating its seat would be empty.

Joe Biden will attend a joint session by video link.

Since overthrowing Aung San Suu Kyi's government, detaining her and most of her allies and ending a decade of tentative democracy, Myanmar military has killed more than 1,000 people and arrested thousands, monitoring group the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners says.

The junta disputes that count as inflated and says soldiers have been killed in fighting with armed opposition groups nationwide.

On the agenda for Tuesday s opening day were three separate meetings between the Asean leaders and representatives of the United States, China and South Korea.

In deciding to sideline the Myanmar junta boss, Asean cited his failure to make steps to end hostilities, initiate dialogue, allow humanitarian support and grant a special envoy full access in the country.

Myanmar insists the conflict is being stoked by terrorists allied with a shadow unity government and says Asean is not taking that into account.

Michael Vatikiotis, Asia director of the Geneva-based Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, said Myanmar s junta probably cares about being frozen out of the summit although it has a history of enduring international isolation.

The question now is whether parallel national leaders will agree to engage with the regional unity government more formally, as the US and EU has started to do, he said.

The National Unity Government is an alliance of ethnic minority groups and pro-democracy armies formed after the coup.