City
Epaper

Japan accepts five Myanmar diplomats appointed by Junta-controlled govt

By ANI | Published: November 13, 2021 12:34 PM

The Japanese government on Friday accepted the five diplomats appointed by Myanmar's military-controlled government, local media reported citing Japanese government sources.

Open in App

The Japanese government on Friday accepted the five diplomats appointed by Myanmar's military-controlled government, local media reported citing Japanese government sources.

The acceptance of five diplomats appointed by Junta-ruled Myanmar by Japan could be perceived as backing Junta rule, the Kyodo News report said.

"The Japanese government deemed it was unable to refuse their appointments for fear that doing so would adversely affect its ability to protect Japanese nationals in the country amid political turmoil in the wake of the military's February coup that ousted the civilian government of Aung San Suu Kyi," said the Japanese News outlet citing a Foreign Ministry source.

The government sources further stated that Japan contends there must be some practical connections with the military government.

According to Kyodo News, in March, the junta dismissed two diplomats at its embassy in Tokyo after they boycotted their duties in protest of the coup and the ensuing violent military crackdown on demonstrators.

"Since May, the five junta-appointed diplomats have been acknowledged by Japan as representatives of Myanmar on several occasions. However, they are not replacements for the two dismissed diplomats," the Japanese News outlet report said citing multiple sources.

As per the report, The Japanese government has agreed to not withdraw the visas of two fired diplomats and considered their respect to stay in the country.

Japan stated that it had not processed the diplomatic visas for military-appointed replacements for Aung Soe Moe, and the other anonymous diplomat, that junta had applied for.

Japan has also condemned the military's violent crackdowns on peaceful protesters and called for a halt to the violence, the release of Suu Kyi and other detainees and a return to the democratic process. But it has not joined the United States and other democracies in imposing sanctions on the individuals and groups involved, Kyodo News report said.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: japanTokyoForeign MinistryKyodo News
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessIndia Poised to Become World’s Third Largest Consumer Market by 2026 Outpacing Germany, Japan

InternationalNuclear Envoys of South Korea, China Discuss Korean Peninsula Issues in Tokyo

InternationalJapanese Man Who Gets Paid for Doing Nothing Decides to Offer Service for Free

InternationalEarthquake in Japan: Quake of Magnitude of 6.9 Rattles Bonin Islands; Dramatic Visuals Surface

EntertainmentAamir Khan's Dangal Gets Replaced by This Japanese Film as Highest Grossing Asian Movie Overseas

International Realted Stories

InternationalRussia steps up disinformations campaign against Ukrainian president Zelenskyy: US intelligence

InternationalTaiwan Detects 27 Chinese Aircraft, Seven Vessels Near Its Airspace, Water (See Tweet)

InternationalPakistan's government completes preparations for Imran Khan's virtual appearance in Supreme Court today

InternationalPak man throws acid on constable wife, flees

InternationalIsrael attacks Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon