Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing will travel to close ally China next month, two sources close to the military said, in what would be his first known trip there since he led a coup in 2021.
Min Aung Hlaing “is planning to go China in November... the trip has been planned since Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi visited Myanmar” in August, a source close to the military said yesterday.
“He (Min Aung Hlaing) will visit China next month,” another source said.
Both sources requested anonymity to talk to the media.
Beijing is a major ally and arms supplier of the internationally isolated junta that is battling opponents across the country following its coup in 2021.
Analysts say Beijing also maintains ties with Myanmar ethnic armed groups that hold territory near its border.
Some of those groups have seized territory from the junta in northern Shan State, disrupting traffic along a vital trade highway to China.
Shan State borders China’s Yunnan province and is a vital piece of Beijing’s trillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative.
Relations between Beijing and Naypyidaw cooled last year over the junta’s failure to crack down on online scam compounds in Myanmar’s borderlands targeting Chinese citizens.
The compounds were staffed by citizens of China and other countries who were often trafficked and forced to work swindling their compatriots in an industry analysts say is worth billions.
Analysts suggest Beijing later gave tacit approval to an offensive by an alliance of ethnic rebel groups across Shan State, which the alliance said was launched partly to root out the scam compounds. — AFP