Open Letter to ASEAN Leaders: Recommendations from CSOs to the Special ASEAN Summit on Myanmar

23 April 2021

Open Letter to ASEAN Leaders: Recommendations from CSOs in Myanmar and in Southeast Asia to the Special ASEAN Summit on Myanmar

To: Leaders of the Member States of the Association of the Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)

Your Excellencies,

In alignment with the upcoming Special ASEAN Summit on Myanmar on 24 April 2021, we, the undersigned 827 individuals, 402 civil society organisations in Myanmar and 468 in other Southeast Asian nations and globally, call on the ASEAN, its leaders and Member States to come up with an effective and sustainable strategy jointly with the United Nations Security Council, the United Nations Human Rights Council, the International Criminal Court (ICC), and other international community actors in addressing the illegitimate and brutal coup and atrocity crimes committed by the military junta in Myanmar.

We welcome the decision to hold the Special ASEAN Summit on Myanmar, based on the proposal made by President Joko Widodo of the Republic of Indonesia to discuss the worsening situation in Myanmar following the violent crackdown against peaceful protesters and the terror campaign against civilians launched by the junta. The decision hopefully constitutes a precedent and reflects the commitment of ASEAN Member States leaders to address Myanmar\’s appalling situation using its highest-level policy-making body.

However, in view of ASEAN Member States\’ differing positions on the coup in Myanmar, we remain extremely concerned that the ASEAN Summit’s response might  be to  consider the crisis as solely within Myanmar\’s domestic affairs and therefore deciding to refrain from any meaningful action in line with the \”ASEAN Way\” of non-interference and overzealous respect for ‘state sovereignty’.

The differing positions of ASEAN Member States have made it difficult for ASEAN to reach a consensus and resulted in equivocations and delayed responses from ASEAN, while the military junta continued its deliberate, murderous attacks on Myanmar’s people, including various violence against women and girls, much to our sorrow and anger. As evidenced from the outputs produced by the Informal ASEAN Foreign Ministers Meeting (IAFMM), ASEAN responses fall well short of meeting the will of the people of Myanmar. The chair’s statement of the IAFMM meeting neither specifically publicly called out the junta\’s brutality nor called for stronger cooperation with the UN Security Council and Human Rights Council. Further, it also fails to mention ASEAN\’s commitment to supporting targeted economic sanctions against military personnel and business entities and global arms embargo and referral of the Myanmar situation to the ICC.

With the different interests and political will of ASEAN Member States at the moment, we are concerned to what extent the Special ASEAN Summit can create an immediate and meaningful intervention to resolve the situation of Myanmar. ASEAN’s collective and meaningful action to uphold democracy is warranted at this time. Any decision by the ASEAN leaders to treat the military junta as the legitimate representative of Myanmar in the Summit will serve to legitimize the military junta’s crimes and will thus damage not only the relationship of ASEAN with the peoples of Myanmar but the people’s movement for democracy and human rights in the region as a whole. 

Further, the ASEAN and its Member States must recognise the legitimacy of the National Unity Government (NUG), the legitimate and democratically-elected government of Myanmar, given that it represents 76% of elected Members of the Union Parliament, ethnic leaders, the civil disobedience movement, and general strike committees endorsed by the people of Myanmar. Therefore, Myanmar must be represented by the NUG; not by the illegal junta who is trying to take full control of the country through its unprecedented brutality.

As we send this letter to the ASEAN Leaders, the violence and killings by the Myanmar military against protesters and supporters continue with no sign of abating. The junta have so far arbitrarily killed 739 and arrested 3,331 people, including women, elderly people and children.[1] In Karen and Kachin ethnic areas, the junta has been bombing villages, displacing more than 30,000 villagers.[2] In these bombing attacks, civilians including children lost their lives as well as faced difficulties not only about their safety, but also for health, shelter and food. Among those fleeing were women, children, elderly and pregnant women who are due to give birth. There was also a case of a woman who gave birth to her child while she was fleeing. Given the gravity of the situation, the increasing number of victims, and the impact of the crisis on the region\’s security and political stability, we strongly urge ASEAN to take firm and effective actions to address the Myanmar coup through the Special ASEAN Summit.

We urge all ASEAN leaders to listen to, strongly consider, and to heed the aspirations and will of the peoples of Myanmar. The voices of Myanmar people who have risked their lives in defense of democracy and justice must be the anchor, the conscience, behind any modality and outcome of the Special ASEAN Summit on Myanmar. 

Therefore, in solidarity with the people of Myanmar, we call on the ASEAN leaders to immediately take the following actions:

●      Reject the presence of illegitimate military junta as the representative of Myanmar in the Summit;

●      Give the seat of Myanmar in the ASEAN Summit to its legitimate representative, the NUG;

●      Call for all violence against people and peaceful demonstrators as well as supporters and journalists to cease, for the release of all political prisoners, including human rights defenders, protesters and protest leaders and journalists, and the lifting of all restrictions on the internet and on communications more generally;

●      Establish a solid and coordinated response among the  ASEAN, the United Nations Security Council and the United Nations Human Rights Council with the aim of sending a joint delegation to Myanmar to monitor the situation, put ending the violence and helping negotiate a democratic, peaceful and human rights-based solution;

●      Fully support initiatives by the international community to impose a global arms embargo and targeted economic sanctions against the military, their personnel and business entities related to them and for the UN Security Council to refer the Myanmar situation to the ICC;

●      Ensure access for humanitarian aid and health support to all affected areas in Myanmar including opening cross-border humanitarian aid corridors;

●      Put the safety, security, and wellbeing of Myanmar asylum seekers and refugees, including the Rohingya, as one of its priorities;

●      ASEAN countries must not return Myanmar migrant workers and refugees back home regardless of their status.  ASEAN destination countries should extend the Myanmar migrant workers employment contracts for another year or more;

●      Take substantial measures against Myanmar, including suspending Myanmar’s membership of ASEAN. ASEAN shall only lift the suspension once the military junta accepts the authority of NUG, the military places itself fully, permanently and unconditionally under NUG control, the junta is brought to the ICC, and  democracy is fully established.

Only by moving beyond the \”ASEAN Way\” of consensus and non-interference can ASEAN intervene in the Myanmar situation in a meaningful and robust way. Myanmar is on the verge of becoming a failed state, and it is in ASEAN\’s best interest to take a firm stance on these urgent and distressful developments. Failure to do so risks not only further damaging ASEAN\’s reputation as an effective regional body that can meaningfully contribute to a solid, just, humane and viable community of nations but will undermine ASEAN’s efforts to achieve its vision and mission of a caring, just and peaceful community of nations and people.

Sincerely,

Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA)

Progressive Voice

ALTSEAN Burma 

ASEAN SOGIE Caucus 

ASEAN Youth Forum 

Asia Pacific Forum for Women, Law, and Development (APWLD)

Initiatives for International Dialogue (IID)

SHAPE-SEA

Signatory:

–       827 Individuals

–       402 Civil society organisations based in Myanmar[3]

–       468 Civil society organisations based in other Southeast Asian countries and globally

For further information, please contact [email protected]

List of Endorsement from CSOs based in other Southeast Asian countries and globally

1.ACT4DEM
2.Action & Solidarity in Korea
3.Activists Group for Human Rights ‘BARAM’
4.Activists Group on the Street
5.AGHRB Australia (Action Group for Human Right in Burma
6.AKKMA NATIONAL COALITION PILIPINAS
7.Aksi Lilin Jakarta
8.AKUKFEM
9.Aliran Malaysia
10.All Indonesian Trade Union Confederation (KASBI)
11.Alliance for Conflict Transformation (ACT) Cambodia
12.Alternatives to Violence Project In Korea
13.ALTSean Burma
14.Andong YWCA
15.Ansan YWCA
16.Anti Myanmar Military dictatorship network Australia
17.AnYang YWCA
18.Areum Nara
19.ASEAN Parliamentarian for Human Rights (APHR)
20.ASEAN SOGIE Caucus (ASC)
21.ASEAN Trade Union Council (ATUC)
22.ASEAN Youth Forum (AYF)
23.Asia Democracy Chronicles
24.Asia Democracy Network (ADN)
25.Asia Floor Wage Alliance (AFWA)
26.Asia Justice and Rights (AJAR)
27.Asia Pacific Forum for Women Law and Development (APWLD)
28.Asia-Pacific Solidarity Coalition (APSOC)
29.Asian Companions Against Brutality
30.Asian Culture Forum on Development Foundation (ACFOD)
31.Asian Dignity Initiative
32.Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA)
33.Asian Migrant Women Center
34.Asian Network for Free Elections (ANFREL)
35.Assistance Association For Political Prisoners (AAPP)
36.Association of Korea Minjung Theologians
37.Asylum Access Malaysia (AAM)
38.Ateneans for Governance, Innovation, Leadership and Service (AGILAS)
39.Australia Karen Organizations
40.BALAOD Mindanaw
41.Blooming School
42.Boat People SOS
43.BUCHEON YWCA
44.Buddhist Solidarity for Reform
45.Building and Wood Workers International Asia Pacific
46.Building Assets, Asia
47.Burma Action Ireland
48.Burma Human Rights Network (BHRN)
49.Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK
50.BUSAN YWCA
51.BUTTL\’ Chunganm Human Rights Educational Activist Group
52.Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association (ADHOC)
53.Cambodian Institute for Democracy (CID)
54.Canadian Buddhist Civil Liberties and Human Rights  Association
55.Canadian Buddhist Civil Liberties and Human Rights Association
56.Catholic Association Of Labour And Elderly (Masan Diocese)
57.Catholic Women\’s Center
58.Center for Alliance of Labor and Human Rights (CENTRAL)
59.Center for Freedom of Information
60.Center for Peace Education, Miriam College, Philippines
61.Centre for Architecture and Human Rights
62.Centre for Human Rights Research & Advocacy (CENTHRA)
63.CHANGJAK21
64.Changnyeong Environmental Movement Union
65.Changwon Icoup Consumer Life Cooperative
66.Changwon Minyechong
67.Changwon Sustainable Development Council
68.Changwon Women\’s Association
69.Changwon Women\’s Center Jinhae Hall
70.Changwon YMCA
71.Chanwon YWCA
72.Cheonan YWCA
73.Cheongju YWCA
74.Cheongma History Meeting
75.Cheongman Haengwoong
76.Child Fund Korea Gyeongnam Children\’s Protection Center
77.Children\’s Book
78.Children\’s Peace Library
79.Christian Association for Community Organizing
80.Christian Youth Academy
81.CHUNCHEON YWCA
82.Chung Soon-Wook Of Changwon City
83.Chungju YWCA
84.Church and Society Committee of PROK
85.Citizen\’s Radio
86.Citizens\’ Coalition For Democratic Press Of Gyeongsangnam-Do Province
87.Citizens\’ Solidarity Tongyeong Branch
88.Civic Association Of Masan, Changwon And Jinhae Wit Grandmothers          ‘Japanese Military Sexual Slavery’
89.Civil Rights Defenders
90.Coalition of Cambodia Farmers Community Association (CCFC)
91.Coalition of Industrial Accidents Prevention in Ulsan
92.Coalition of Rohingya Organisations in Malaysia (CROM)
93.Coalition to Abolish Modern-day Slavery in Asia (CAMSA)
94.Commission for the Disappeared and Victims of Violence (KontraS)
95.Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (COMFREL)
96.Cooperative Unnine(Sister\’s)
97.Critical_Group Sigak
98.Cross Cultural Foundation
99.Cultural Incheon Network
100.D4B – Democracy for Burma
101.DAEGU YWCA
102.Daejeon YWCA
103.DAPLS
104.Dasan Human Rights Center
105.Democratic Socialists of America [DSA], Coalition Against Chevron in Myanmar
106.Doingle Around
107.Donghae YWCA
108.Dongyo Childish Grownups
109.Ecological Environmental Education And Cultural Center
110.Ecumenical Youth Council in Korea
111.Education Hope Gimhae Parent Association
112.Education Hope Gyeongnam Parent Association
113.Education Hope Sacheon Parent Association
114.Ekta Parishad Manipur
115.Empower Foundation
116.EMPOWER Malaysia (Persatuan Kesedaran Komuniti Selangor)
117.Enjoyable SW Thinking Lab
118.Eyes Of Citizens
119.Fellowship with the Sufferers
120.Fine Dust Resolution Gyeongnam Citizens\’ Headquarters
121.FKTU Ulsan Regional Office
122.Foinsa\’e Hahu Futuru Timor
123.Forest Of Life In Gyeongsangnam-Do
124.Freedom Dignity and Asia
125.Gangneung YWCA
126.Gathering Of Gyeongnam Teachers To Protect The Environment And Life
127.Geoje Civic Energy Cooperative
128.Geoje Sustainable Development Council
129.GEOJE Young Womens Christian Associaton
130.Gimhae Education Solidarity
131.Gimhae Sustainable Development Council Ecological Division
132.GIMHAE YWCA
133.GJIF(Gwangju independent film)
134.Global Child Advocates
135.Global Movement for Myanmar Democracy
136.Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflict – Southeast Asia           (GPPAC – SEA)
137.Goesan Gender Equality Lecturer\’s Group
138.Gommasil Children
139.GongGam Human Rights Law Foundation
140.Good Friends
141.GOYANG YWCA
142.Green Party Korea
143.Green Party Seoul
144.GREENKOREA INCHEON
145.GreenKorea Legal Center
146.Greenpeace Southeast Asia
147.Groups of Social and Political Commentators in Cambodia
148.GUNSAN YWCA
149.Gwangju Alliance Against Opposing the Military Regime and Supporting Democratization in Myanmar
150.Gwangju Asia Sisterhood Network
151.Gwangju Cinema Solidarity
152.Gwangju Greenkorea United
153.Gwangmyeong Young Women\’s Christion Association
154.Gwangyang YWCA
155.Gyeongnam Amphibian Network
156.Gyeongnam Energy Transition Network
157.Gyeongnam Grass Root Environmental Education Center
158.Gyeongnam Green Party
159.Gyeongnam Migrant Center
160.Gyeongnam Solidarity For Safe School Meals
161.Gyeongnam Sunlight Development Cooperative
162.Gyeongsangnam-Do Branch Of The National School Non-Regular Workers\’ Union
163.Gyeongsangnam-Do Civic Environment Research Institute
164.Gyeongsangnam-Do Information Society Research Institute
165.Gyeongsangnam-Do Women, Moms, Peoples\’ Party
166.Gyeongsangnam-Do Women\’s Human Rights Counseling Center Of Women\’s Association
167.GZO Peace Institute
168.Haein church
169.Haemalgeum(Sunny) Cultural Activity Center
170.Haman Women\’s Association
171.Han Church
172.Hana Church
173.Hanam YWCA
174.HANBAIK CHURCH YOUNG ADULT
175.Hansalim Gyeongsangnam-Do
176.HANSALIMKYUNGNAM
177.HAPPYCLASS MEDITATION COMMUNITY
178.Homeless Action
179.Hope Woongsang
180.Human Rights and Sport
181.Human Rights Center of the National Council of Churches in  Korea(NCCK)
182.Human Rights Working Group (HRWG)
183.I Coop Consumer Life Cooperative In Jang Yu
184.Immigrants Advocacy Center Gamdong
185.Incheon Civil Society in Solidarity
186.Incheon People Solidarity
187.Incheon Solidarity Against Disability Discrimination
188.INCHEON YWCA
189.Incorporated Organization Silcheon Bulgyo
190.Independent Democracy of Informal Economy Association (IDEA)
191.Indonesia for Global Justice (IGJ)
192.Indonesian Legal Aid Foundation (YLBHI)
193.Initiatives for International Dialogue (IID)
194.Institute for Asian Democracy
195.Institute For Deliberative Democracy And Environment
196.Institute for Green Transformation
197.Inter-religious Climate and Ecology Network
198.International Child Rights Center
199.International Development Community Alliance in Korea
200.International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF)
201.International Trade Union Confederation – Asia Pacific (ITUC – AP)
202.International Women\’s Rights Action Watch (IWRAW) Asia Pacific
203.Ivy Humanities School
204.Jakarta Candlelight Action
205.Jecheon YWCA
206.Jeju Dark Tours
207.JEJU YWCA
208.Jeonggeum Church
209.Jeonju Youth Counseling & Welfare Center
210.JEONJU YWCA
211.Jeonju’s Solidarity for Democracy in Myanmar
212.Jeonkyojo Incheon
213.JH YWCA
214.Jinhae Women\’s Association
215.Jinhae YWCA
216.Jinju Environmental Movement Union
217.Jinju Regional Economic Research Institute
218.Jinju Women\’s Association
219.JINJU YWCA
220.Joint Committee on Freedom of Expression and Press Repression
221.June 10 Minju Gyeongnam
222.June 15 Joint Declaration Changwon Branch
223.June Democratic Resistance Spirit Succession Gyeongnam Association
224.Justice Party Gyeongnam Youth Student Committee
225.Justice Party Gyeongsangnam-Do Party
226.Justice Party Yangsan Regional Committee
227.Justice Party\’s Namhae Hadong Regional Committee
228.Kaladan Press Network
229.Kangzinoop Church
230.KctuLaw Ulsan
231.KCTUUl
232.KFEM
233.KHMU (Korea Health and Medical labor Union)
234.KIDOKYOMINHOE
235.Kilusang Mayo Uno
236.KMCC (Korea-Mae Sot Cooperation Center)
237.Korea Christian Action Organization
238.Korea Eco Farmers Association
239.Korea Federation for Environmental Movements in Incheon
240.Korea Federation Of Environmental Movements In Gimhae And Yangsan
241.Korea Federation Of Environmental Movements In Machangjin
242.Korea Federation Of Environmental Movements In Sacheon
243.Korea Federation Of Producers In Gyeongsangnamdo Province
244.Korea Institute for Religious Freedom
245.Korea Institute Of Ecological Environment
246.Korea Rurban Regeneration Citizen\’s Solidarity
247.Korea Teachers Union-Ulsan
248.Korea Women\’s Associations United (KWAU)
249.Korean Civil Society in Solidarity with Rohingya
250.Korean Civil Society in Support of Democracy in Myanmar
251.Korean Confederation Of Trade Unions Women\’s Committee
252.Korean Disability Forum
253.Korean House for International Solidarity
254.Korean Pharmacists for Democratic Society(Ulsan district)
255.Korean Producers & Directors\’ Association
256.Korean Public Service and Transport Workers\’ Union
257.Korean Solidarity for Overseas Community Organization
258. KSBSI (ALL iNDONESIAN TRADE UNION CONFEDERATION)
259.KSCF
260.KSPI – CITU (Confederation of Indonesia Trade Union)
261.KTU Yangsan Middle School Branch
262.Kurawal Foundation
263.Kwangju YWCA
264.Kyungnam University Alumni Community
265.Kyungnam University Environmental Group
266.Labour Party Gyeongsangnam-Do Provincial Party
267.Lawyers for a Democratic Society, Ulsanjibu
268.LICADHO
269.Like Pearls
270.List of Signatory (Southeast Asia and Global)
271.M.M.C
272.Malaysia Muda
273.Malaysian Humanitarian Movement
274.Mandooparty to prepare a new church
275.Manushya Foundation
276.Migration Action Research Community (MARCO)
277.Maruah
278.Masan Icoup Consumer Life Cooperative
279.MASAN YWCA
280.Media Christian Solidarity
281.Migrant CARE
282.Migrant World Film Festival
283.Migrant World TV
284.Migrants Trade Union(MTU)
285.Militants for Workers’ Liberty(Ulsan)
286.Milk Tea Allaiance
287.Milk Tea Alliance Indonesia
288.Milk Tea Alliance Philippines
289.MINBYUN – Lawyers for a Democratic Society International Solidarity Committee
290.Mindanao Peacebuilding Institute Foundation, Inc.
291.Mindanawon Initiatives for Cultural Dialogue
292.MOKPO YWCA
293.My Neighborhood Small Library
294.My Sister’s Home
295.My Sister’s Place
296.Myanmar Alliance in Malaysia ( MAM )
297.Myanmar Club, Singapore
298.Myanmar Democracy Network in Korea
299.Myanmar Ethnic Rohingya Human Rights Organisation Malaysia (MERHROM)
300.Myanmar Human Rights Alliance Network (MHRAN)
301.Myanmar Queer Straight Alliance
302.Naeseo Village School
303.Namhae Women\’s Association
304.Namwon YWCA
305.Namyangju Women\’s Center for Migrant Workers
306.National Clergy Conference for Justice and Peace
307.National Farmers Association Busan Gyeongnam Federation
308.National Trade Union Center Philippines
309.National Women Farmers Association Gyeongsangnam-Do Union
310.National YWCA of KOREA
311.Nature And People
312.Negrosanon Young Leaders Institute Inc
313.NEVER AGAIN\’ Association
314.New Bodhisattva Network
315.NGO HALO Timor Leste
316.Non San Young Women\’s Christian Assosiation
317.NYJ YWCA
318.OFM KOREA JPIC
319.Organisation Of Karenni Development (OKD)
320.Osan Welfare Community Center
321.Paju YWCA
322.ParkJongCheol Memorial Foundation
323.Pax Christi Philippines
324.Pax Christi Korea
325.Peacemakers
326.PEACEMOMO
327.People In My Neighborhood (Community For Life And Autonomy)
328.People, not Profit
329.People\’s Party Gyeongsangnam-Do
330.People\’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD)
331.Peoples Empowerment Foundation (PEF)
332.PIDA (People\’s Initiative for Development Alternatives)
333.Platform.C
334.Pohang YWCA
335.Power-Sentro
336.Prathiba Media Network
337.Progressive 3.0
338.Progressive Korea
339.Progressive Voice
340.Project Umbrella Burma
341.PROK
342.PROK Namsindo
343.Prun Naeseo Community Association
344.Pusat KOMAS
345.Pyeongtongsa In Masan, Changwon And Jinhae
346.Rainbow Vision
347.Refresh Community
348.Refugee Rights Center NANCEN
349.Representative Of The Institute Of Life And Arts
350.Resident Association For Safe And Happy Yangsan
351.Residents\’ Committee For Coal Power Plant In Sacheon, Namhae And Hadong
352.RESIST US-LED WAR
353.Rohingya Arakanese Refugee Committee (RARC)
354.Rohingya Community Development Campaign (RCDC)
355.Rohingya Union for Women Education and Development (RUWED)
356.Rural Infrastructure and Human Resource Development Organization (RIHRDO)
357.Sacheon Ecological Environment Research Society
358.Sacheon Women\’s Association
359.Sacheon YWCA
360.Sahmakum Teang Tnaut – Cambodian Urban NGO (STT)
361.Samahan ng mga Mag-aaral ng Agham Pampulitika ng Ateneo (SAMAPULA)
362.Sangnam Film Production Center
363.SEA Junction
364.SEBASA
365.Sejong YWCA
366.SEM Thailand
367.Sentro ng mga Nagkakaisa at Progresibong Manggagawa (SENTRO) – Center of United and Progressive Workers
368.Seochon YWCA
369.Seomjingang River And Jiri Mountain People
370.Seong-Mun-Bakk Church
371.Seongnam YWCA
372.Seoul Disabled People\’s Right Film Festival
373.Seoul National University MEARI Alumni Association
374.SGPO YWCA
375.Shancheong Humanities Meeting Leadership Society
376.SHAPE-SEA
377.Sidaebogjigong-gam
378.Social Cooperative Celandine
379.Social Cooperative Containing A Village
380.Social Cooperative Handle Sandeul
381.Socialist Revolutionary Workers Party Ulsan
382.Society for the Promotion of Human Rights (PROHAM)
383.SOK-CHO YWCA
384.Sokcho YWCA
385.Solidarity Against Disability Discrimination
386.Solidarity for Another World
387.Solidarity for Peace & Humanrights
388.South North Korea Railway
389.Southeast Asia Freedom of Expression Network (SAFEnet)
390.SSSWC
391.Students\’ March
392.Sumdol Presbyterian Church
393.SUNCHEON YWCA
394.Sungmisan School
395.Supporters Group for Migrant Workers Movement
396.SUWONYWCA
397.Swedish Burma Committee
398.Taiwan Alliance for Thai Democracy (台灣推動泰國民主聯盟)
399.Task Force on ASEAN Migrant Workers
400.TEN FOR ONE
401.Thai Action Committe for Democracy in Burma (TACDB)
402.Thai Allied Committee with Desegregated Burma Foundation
403.Thai Democrats Without Borders Association
404.The Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI)
405.The Anglican Church of Ulsan
406.The Declaration of Global Citizen
407.The Federation Of Korean Artists In South Gyeongsang Province Geoje Branch
408.The Indonesian Human Rights Monitor (IMPARSIAL)
409.The Jeonnam National Church Man\’s
410.The Power of Incheon Citizens
411.The Research Insititute of the Differently Abled People In Incheon
412.The Society For The Making Of A Real Village To Live In.
413.Think Centre
414.TMDU Myanmar Students Association
415.Tongyeong Citizens\’ Culture Group \’Tongro(Aisles)\’
416.Tongyeong City Committee Of The Korean Confederation Of Trade Union
417.Tongyeong Geoje Environmental Movement Union
418.Tongyeong Sustainable Development Council
419.TongYeong Young Women\’s Christian Association
420.TRANSCEND Pilipinas
421.Transgender Liberation Front (TLF)
422.Transparency International Cambodia
423.Uijeongbu YWCA
424.Ulsan Bukgu Contingent Workers Center
425.Ulsan Civil Organizations that support Myanmar\’s democracy (66 organizations)
426.Ulsan Green Party
427.Ulsan Labor Education Community
428.Ulsan Labor Humanrights Center
429.ULSAN MIGRANT CENTER
430.Ulsan Parents EduCoop
431.Ulsan People`s Solidarity
432.Ulsan Solidarity For Human Rights
433.Ulsan worker group for Workplace struggle and Class solidarity
434.Ulsan YMCA
435.UNION
436.UP Institute of Human Rights
437.US Campaign for Burma
438.V Day Thailand
439.Vegetarian Peace Solidarity
440.Vietnam Committee on Human Rights
441.Vietnamese Women for Human Rights
442.Wewood Small Library
443.WFFIG
444.WITNESS
445.WomenHealth Philippines
446.Won Buddhist Civil Society Network
447.WONJU YWCA
448.Woongsang Labor Counseling Center Woongsang Story
449.Worker\’s Solidarity from Below in Jeonbuk
450.Yangsan Foreign Workers Support Center
451.Yangsan Icoup Life Cooperative
452.Yangsan Parent Movement
453.Yangsan Women\’s Association
454.Yayasan Perlindungan Insani Indonesia
455.YEOSUYWCA
456.YMCA Geoje
457.YMCA Gimhae
458.YMCA Masan
459.YMCA Yangsan
460.Yoon Sang-Won Memorial Association
461.Young Deung Po Urban Industrial Mission
462.Young Kang Church
463.YOUNGPA Church
464.Youth Resource Development Program (YRDP)
465. YWCA Gimhae
466.YWCA Masan
467.YWCA Pyeongtaek
468.YWCA Ulsan

[1] Data from the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) as of 21 April 2021

[2] https://www.myanmar-now.org/en/news/following-deadly-airstrikes-junta-planes-seen-spying-on-knu-territory

[3] Due to safety and security reasons, names of individuals and civil society organisations based in Myanmar will not be disclosed.