The visit of Myanmar’s president to New Delhi this week is being closely watched by human rights groups and regional observers, as the United Kingdom issues a fresh call for democratic dialogue in the crisis-hit country.
Myanmar’s military-backed leader made the trip amid escalating violence and a deepening humanitarian crisis. The visit comes just days after the UK Foreign Office released a statement urging “meaningful and inclusive dialogue” to restore civilian rule.
For workers and families in Myanmar, the political turmoil has brought soaring food prices and mounting unemployment. “The cost of rice has doubled. People cannot afford to feed their children,” said a teacher from Yangon who asked not to be named for fear of reprisal.
The junta’s crackdown on dissent has seen thousands of public sector workers, including doctors and teachers, sacked or detained. Trade unions have been banned, and strikes are met with live fire.
Yet the UK’s call for dialogue is met with scepticism by many. “Nice words from London won’t stop the bullets,” said a former miner now living in a displacement camp. “We need action, not statements.”
The Indian government has traditionally maintained a policy of non-interference, prioritising economic ties and border security. But rights groups argue that engagement with the junta legitimises its rule. “Every handshake with the generals is a slap to the democracy movement,” said a spokesperson for Amnesty International.
For the ordinary people of Myanmar, the stakes are brutally clear. The choice is not between democracy and military rule, but between survival and starvation. This visit will be judged not by the pomp of state dinners, but by whether it lifts the burden from the kitchen tables of Myanmar’s poor.








