Kuala Lumpur Aims to Reignite ASEAN-Led Peace Efforts Amid Junta’s Election Plans
Malaysia’s Foreign Minister is set to travel to Myanmar on Thursday for high level talks with the country’s ruling military junta, the Malaysian government announced. The visit is expected to focus on the junta’s upcoming election plans and the long-stalled peace process aimed at ending the political and humanitarian crisis triggered by the 2021 military coup.
The minister’s trip marks a rare diplomatic engagement with the junta, as most ASEAN and Western nations have kept formal contact limited since the military seized power, ousting the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi.
According to Malaysia’s Foreign Ministry, the envoy will press Myanmar’s generals to show concrete progress on the implementation of the ASEAN Five-Point Consensus a regional peace roadmap agreed upon in 2021 but largely ignored by the junta since.
“Malaysia remains committed to supporting a peaceful resolution in Myanmar and ensuring that any future elections are credible, inclusive, and grounded in national reconciliation,” the ministry said in a statement.
Concerns Over Planned Elections
Myanmar’s military government has said it plans to hold elections in 2026, though international observers have expressed skepticism over the transparency and legitimacy of the process, especially amid ongoing crackdowns on dissent and violent clashes with ethnic militias and pro-democracy resistance groups.
Malaysia has taken a more vocal stance than some of its Southeast Asian neighbors, repeatedly calling for the release of political prisoners and unrestricted humanitarian access to conflict zones.
The upcoming visit comes as part of Kuala Lumpur’s broader effort to revive regional diplomacy on Myanmar and ensure that the crisis remains a top priority on the ASEAN agenda.

