Finally Asean has issued a statement on the situation in Thailand, where
the military recently staged a coup d’etat after declaring martial law and a 10
p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew. The statement expresses “full support for a peaceful
resolution to the ongoing challenge in the country through dialogue and full
respect of democratic principles and rule of law.” It also affirms “confidence
in the resilience of the Thai nation to overcome the present difficulties and
[Asean stands] ready to extend all appropriate support based on the principles
provided in the [Asean] Charter.”
You
don’t feel the earth move under you when you read that statement. But, funny,
some Asean countries aren’t comfortable with it, and only reluctantly agreed to
its release. They’d have preferred to stay in their comfort zone and let Asean
commit the sin of silence.
From
snippets of reportage, the story goes that the idea of issuing a statement was
first broached by Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen during the 14th Asean
Summit earlier this month. Nothing happened then. At that time Yingluck
Shinawatra had just stepped down as prime minister by virtue of a court
decision. Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa drafted a statement well
before the Thai military disbanded the caretaker government. Myanmar as Asean
Chair revised the draft. Media reports intimate that the Asean foreign
ministers struggled before reaching a consensus on releasing it.
Meanwhile
the Thai military has taken into custody Yingluck, members of her family, and
leaders of the ruling Puea Thai party. Their whereabouts are unknown, although
the military avows they’re well treated. The media are muzzled. Enraged bands
of Red Shirts — Shinawatra loyalists — are confronting soldiers. Civil war is a
clear and present risk.
Now
there’s talk that Thaksin will set up a government in exile. God forbid that
Cambodia or any other Asean country be host to that expatriate government. That
could be fatal to Asean solidarity. And make things worse for Thailand.
For
those with true concern for Thailand, this is no time for silence or inaction.
Asean as a whole — not just Indonesia — should be exploring options in
anticipation of contingencies, and chewing over with the United Nations various
scenarios. It should be sketching out ways by which the World Organization can
lend support to regional initiatives. It should also be taking a good look at
its Political-Security Community blueprint: there should be something useful
there for dealing with the Thai situation.
Marty
has done right to call on “the armed forces of Thailand and various relevant
civilian elements to work together in a reconciliatory atmosphere to quickly
restore the political situation in Thailand.” This means that without undue
external interference, all the Thais will have to sort out their differences
themselves, instead of just the military prescribing a “new order.” All
national stakeholders should be consulted in the shaping of Thai democracy.
Their political animosities can’t be so huge they can’t set these aside for the
sake of the nation.
It will
take great effort, but Asean in cooperation with the UN and the international
community can create the regional political environment wherein Thai democracy
can recover and then thrive.
In this
enterprise, Asean must take the lead if it is to become the Political-Security
Community that it has envisioned. A Community of nations that shares the same
values of democracy and love of human rights. And is responsible for its own
internal security.
A
Community that isn’t tempted to be silent when it should speak. That doesn’t
dither when the situation calls for diplomatic initiative.
Will
Asean become such a Community? Until it has dealt with the Thai problem the way
a Community should, the jury is out.
Jamil
Maidan Flores is a Jakarta-based writer whose interests include philosophy and
foreign policy. He is also an English-language consultant for the Indonesian
government. The views expressed here are his own.
No comments:
Post a Comment