Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko arrived in Myanmar on a goodwill visit, state media there reported yesterday, becoming the second foreign leader to visit the Southeast Asian country since it came under military rule in 2021.
The visit comes just a month before an election in Myanmar that has been characterized as neither free nor fair by critics. Lukashenko’s goodwill visit is seen by critics as giving the appearance of support to the polls.
Since the takeover, Belarus has been a major supporter and supplier of Myanmar’s military government, along with China and Russia. It is one of only a few countries that have been visited by Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, the head of Myanmar’s military government, who traveled there in March and June. Like Myanmar, the government of Belarus is widely seen as authoritarian.
Photo: Belarusian presidential press service, AFP
Myanmar’s military government has been shunned and sanctioned by many Western nations for ousting the elected government of Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021, and for committing major human rights violations in trying to crush the resistance to army rule that arose after the takeover.
The only other foreign leader to visit Myanmar since 2021 was then-Cambodian prime minister Hun Sen, in his capacity as chair of the ASEAN in 2022.
A report in the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper said Lukashenko’s arrival at the military airport in Naypyidaw saw him welcomed by Burmese Prime Minister Nyo Saw and other cabinet members with full state honors and cultural performers.
Lukashenko was to meet with Min Aung Hlaing to discuss deepening friendship and cooperation across various sectors, with agreements and memorandums of understanding between the two countries to be signed during the visit, it said.
During Min Aung Hlaing’s visit in March to Belarus, Lukashenko pledged to support the military-organized election and promised to send observers to monitor it.
Critics have denounced the planned election as a sham to normalize the military’s grip on power, and several opposition groups, including armed resistance forces, said they will try to derail the polls.
Justice For Myanmar, a rights advocacy group that seeks to expose the financial underpinning of the military, said Belarus has provided Myanmar’s military with arms, equipment and training that builds the army’s technical capacity and its domestic arms industry.
Transfers from Belarus include a Myanmar Air Defense Operational Command system, radar technology and ground-based missile systems, the group said.
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