This decision by the leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to support the global body’s initiatives to bring political reform and improve the human rights situation in Burma was an admission of the 10-nation bloc’s weakness in dealing with its most difficult member.
![]() |
Burmese nationals and activists on bicycles hold placards while protesting near the venue for the 14th Asean Summit being held in the Thai resort city of Hua Hin, on February 28. (Photo: Reuters) |
The promotion and protection of human rights in the region is recognized as a goal of the charter.
"The charter provides the legal and institutional framework for Asean to be a more rules-based, effective and people-centred organization paving the way for realizing an Asean Community by 2015," revealed the closing statement by Thai Prime Minister Abhist Vejjajiva, the chairman of the summit, which was held in this resort town south of Bangkok.
"We adopted the Asean Political-Security Community Blueprint which envisaged Asean to be a rules-based community of shared values and norms; a cohesive, peaceful, stable and resilient region with shared responsibility for comprehensive security; as well as a dynamic and outward-looking region," the chairman’s statement added.
But in the face of a test to live up to such lofty assurances on "the Burma problem," Asean leaders let the agenda be set by the Burmese Prime Minister Gen Thein Sein.
"We underscored the necessity for and welcomed the Myanmar government’s willingness to engage in active cooperation with the UN secretary-general’s special envoy, as well as the UN special rapporteur on human rights, in order to address the international community’s concern about the situation in Myanmar," added the closing statement where only Burma was singled out for a special comment.
Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi summed up Asean’s inability to deal with Burma during a post-summit press conference. "The Myanmar prime minister said that they would like to deal with the United Nations and not Asean," Badawi revealed. "We (Asean) will not be the interlocutor."
This exchange, which took place during a closed-door leaders’ meeting, saw other comments made regarding Burma, a country that has been ruled by successive, oppressive military regimes since a 1962 coup.
"Asean can help by issuing a statement of support for Gambari’s mission," Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsein Loong reportedly told other Asean leaders, according to official notes from the meeting seen by IPS.
But the Singapore premier was not in favour of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon making another visit to Burma, his second since May 2008, if nothing concrete can be achieved. "We should not encourage UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to visit Myanmar unless there are concrete deliverables," Lee reportedly told the other Asean presidents and prime ministers, the official notes added.
"A visit will raise unrealistic expectations that cannot be met, and would be counter-productive," Lee said.
Gambari’s seven visits to Burma made little progress. His recent missions to the country, the last of which was in early February, has seen him being denied access to meet Burma’s strongman, the reclusive Sen-Gen Than Shwe.
Asean’s policy shift toward Burma comes after the regional alliance tried to flex its own diplomatic muscle in recent years to express its frustrations and the lack of genuine progress towards genuine political reform in Burma.