Myanmar’s ousted ambassador to the UK, who has been locked out of his embassy by the military, urged the British government on Thursday to refuse to recognise the junta’s envoys and send them back to Myanmar. In a move that has implications for Myanmar’s network of diplomats across the world, the ambassador was locked out of his London embassy on Wednesday by his deputy at the behest of the Myanmar military which seized power in February.
“We believe the UK government would not back those who are working for the military junta and we also would like to urge the UK government to send them back,” ambassador Kyaw Zwar Minn said through his spokesman who read out a statement in English.
“We call on the UK government specifically to refuse to work with the charge d’affairs Chit Win that the military council have nominated or any other ambassador that they might try to nominate in future,” the ambassador said. There was no immediate response from Britain to the appeal, but earlier on Thursday foreign minister Dominic Raab praised the ousted envoy’s courage and repeated his call for a restoration of democracy in Myanmar. In a letter from Myanmar’s embassy to Britain’s foreign ministry, those in control of the embassy said deputy ambassador Chit Win had taken over as charge d’affairs as of April 7.
Kyaw Zwar Minn was recalled as ambassador on March 9, the letter said. He said he had refused to obey the foreign ministry since then and has called for the release of detained civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi. “I have been locked out,” he told Reuters late on Wednesday. “It’s a kind of coup, in the middle of London.”
Information blackout
An information blackout under Myanmar’s military junta worsened on Thursday as fibre broadband service, the last legal way for ordinary people to access the Internet, became intermittently inaccessible on several networks.