BANGKOK — Thai banks have become the main supplier of international financial services for Myanmar's military government, enabling it to purchase goods and equipment to carry out its increasingly bloody war against pro-democracy resistance forces and armed ethnic minority groups, a U.N. expert said in a report issued Wednesday.
The report by Tom Andrews, the U.N. special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, tracks how the military junta has been able to continue procuring arms by shifting suppliers of financial services and military hardware as previous sources have been blocked by sanctions imposed by the United States, the European Union and other states.
The report charges that companies in Thailand, Myanmar's eastern neighbor, have taken up the slack left by the withdrawal of Singapore firms' business with the military junta.
It says the junta, formally known as the State Administration Council, ''continues to engage with a broad international banking network to sustain itself and its weapons supplies.''
''Over the past year, 16 banks located in seven countries processed transactions related to SAC military procurement; 25 banks have provided correspondent banking services to Myanmar's state-owned banks since the coup,'' says the report, titled "Banking on the Death Trade: How Banks and Governments Enable the military Junta in Myanmar,'' presented to the U.N. Human Rights Council.
Myanmar's military junta came to power in February 2021 after the army ousted the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi. After security forces used deadly force to suppress nonviolent protests, armed resistance arose and the country is now in a civil war. The military has been accused of carrying out widespread human rights violations, including the bombing of civilians.
''The good news is that the junta is increasingly isolated,'' Andrews said in a statement. ''The Myanmar military's annual procurement of weapons and military supplies through the formal banking system declined by a third from the year ending March 2023 to the year that followed — from $377 million to $253 million.''
''The bad news is that the junta is circumventing sanctions and other measures by exploiting gaps in sanctions regimes, shifting financial institutions, and taking advantage of the failure of (U.N.) Member States to fully coordinate and enforce actions.''