UK sanctions companies supplying aviation fuel to Myanmar junta

02 February 2023
UK sanctions companies supplying aviation fuel to Myanmar junta

The UK Government announced new sanctions targeting suppliers of aviation fuel to the Myanmar junta on 31 January to coincide with the second anniversary of the coup.

In a statement announcing the sanctions the UK Government said they would target enablers of the air force bombing campaign and repression of the civilian population and that it was doing it to ratchet pressure on the Myanmar military.

It said that companies supplying the Myanmar Air Force with the aviation fuel to carry out its relentless bombing campaign against innocent people have been targeted by the UK in the latest round of sanctions, announced to coincide with the second anniversary of the brutal coup that ousted Myanmar’s elected government.

Two companies and two individuals, all associated with what is known as the Asia Sun group, and integral to the aviation fuel industry in Myanmar, have been sanctioned. The group supplies fuel to the Myanmar Air Force enabling its barbaric air raiding campaign in an attempt to maintain power, killing thousands and displacing hundreds of thousands of Myanmar’s people in the process.

The two companies are Asia Sun Trading Company Limited and Cargo Link Company Limited. Both are part of what is known as the Asia Sun group which dominates the aviation fuel sector in Myanmar and are involved in the transfer of aviation fuel to the Myanmar Air Force.

Also announced were personal sanctions on Zaw Min Tun: Director and sole shareholder of Asia Sun Trading and Win Kyaw Kyaw Aung, a former Director and shareholder of Asia Sun Trading The UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said: “Our sanctions are meticulously targeted to deliver maximum impact, reducing the military’s access to finance, fuel, arms and equipment.

“The junta must be held to account for their brutal crackdown on opposition voices, terrorising air raids and brazen human rights violations.

“The UK has led a strong, coordinated international response to support the people of Myanmar, their democratic demands and right to fundamental freedoms.”

According to the UK Government The UK has worked with partners including Canada, the United States and the European Union since the coup to impose coordinated and targeted sanctions against the military regime, its business interests and those who facilitate and profit from its brutal campaign.

Since the coup, the UK has now sanctioned 18 individuals and 30 entities, targeting those responsible for the coup, the subsequent violence, and those facilitating it. The government says these sanctions raise the cost for those aligned with and supporting the regime’s campaign of terror and the UK will continue to use economic statecraft to restrict the military’s access to finance and arms and increase the pressure on them to engage with calls for a return to democracy.

As part of its commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific, the UK has led the international community’s work to support a peaceful resolution in Myanmar and a return to democracy; and pushing for progress towards accountability and justice. It has also played a key role in calling on countries around the world to end the sale and transfer of arms and equipment which facilitate the military’s atrocities, according to the government.

It says that at he United Nations, the UK successfully passed a Security Council Resolution on the crisis, the first of its kind, to apply further pressure on the military junta to end its violence. It also strongly supports ASEAN’s Five Point Consensus, which demands the military immediately ceases its violence and engages in constructive dialogue with all parties.