United Nations: Any instability in Myanmar will directly affect India and New Delhi does not want action by the international community that would further destabilise the Southeast Asian country, India's Permanent Representative to the UN and President of UN Security Council for the month of August Ambassador T S Tirumurti has said.
The Myanmar military staged a coup on February 1 this year, nullifying the results of the November 2020 elections and imposed a state of emergency after detaining hundreds of activists, civil servants and politicians, including Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and other leaders of her National League for Democracy (NLD).
The military staged the coup amid its rising friction with the ruling NLD government over the results of the November 8 general election. The NLD had registered a thumping victory in the polls. However, the military had alleged discrepancies in the electoral process.
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The democratic transition in Myanmar had taken place in 2011 after decades of military rule. Myanmar is an extremely important neighbour for us. So what happens in Myanmar is extremely important for us and we have a direct stake in the situation in Myanmar, Tirumurti said on Monday during a press conference at the UN Headquarters on the Security Council's Programme of Work.
India, currently a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council for the 2021-22 tenure, assumed the rotating Presidency of the powerful UN organ for the month of August. In response to a question on Myanmar, Tirumurti said India's position on Myanmar has been fairly clear and consistent.
We are deeply concerned about the developments in Myanmar. We have condemned the use of violence in Myanmar. We have urged maximum restraint. We believe that there can be no falling back on the path to democracy in Myanmar, he said.
India has called for upholding the rule of law, taking forward the democratic process, in which New Delhi has actually invested in, and also called for the release of detained leaders, Tirumurti said.
We have repeatedly called for engagement from their side without preconditions and for the peaceful and urgent resolution, he said. Tirumurti said India has extended support to the efforts of ASEAN and hopes it can move expeditiously on their efforts and also on the five-point consensus.
So, we need a constructive and also a coordinated approach. What we do not want is an action on the part of the international community which will further destabilise the country because any instability in the country will directly affect India, he said. Responding to a reporter's question that India has rejected asylum seekers from Myanmar, Tirumurti said this is completely incorrect. It's completely incorrect that we are rejecting people (from Myanmar). We have several thousands of them in India, he said.
It is important to understand that India has four states that are neighbouring Myanmar, Tirumurti said, adding that In Mizoram, the ethnicity of some people is exactly the same as the ethnicity on the other side of Myanmar in the Chins, for example.