The massacre of scores of villagers in a rebel-held area of Myanmar has handed the British government a fresh argument for a more robust intervention by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Word from the region suggests that the death toll in the village, located in the war-torn east of the country, is the largest in a single incident since the military junta seized power in 2021. The precise number of dead remains unconfirmed, but local sources speak of at least 30 civilians, including women and children, hacked down or shot in what appears to be a deliberate act of collective punishment.
The perpetrators, almost certainly elements of the Tatmadaw or its allied militias, have denied all but the most routine of operations in the area. London, ever the moraliser on the global stage, has wasted no time in calling for an emergency meeting of ASEAN to discuss the atrocity. Yet the question that hangs over this latest bloodshed is whether the bloc’s usual tactics of quiet diplomacy and non-interference will shift one iota in the face of such barbarity.
Even the most cursory glance at ASEAN’s history suggests the contrary. The organisation has been notoriously ineffective in dealing with Myanmar’s crisis, preferring to avoid direct condemnation of the junta. But Britain, along with other Western powers, is feeling the pressure to act as the body count rises.
From a purely financial perspective, the instability in Myanmar is a classic case of risk aversion driving capital away. Investors have already priced in a country that is effectively ungovernable, with the kyat in freefall and foreign direct investment drying up. The massacre will only accelerate the flight of any remaining international capital, further impoverishing a nation that was already a laggard in Southeast Asian development.
The UK’s call for ASEAN intervention is a nothing more than a fiscal pariah’s plea for order in a market where chaos reigns. It is the equivalent of begging a central bank to step in when inflation has already spiralled out of control. The junta, for its part, will see this as a foreign plot to undermine its sovereignty, and will dig in deeper.
Meanwhile, gilt yields in London are likely to remain unaffected. The massacre is a tragedy, but it is a distant one for the markets. The real story for the City is the cost of the UK government’s moralising.
Each time the Foreign Office issues a statement, it spends political capital that could be better used on trade negotiations. The British economy cannot afford to be the world’s policeman when the domestic fiscal picture is so fragile. Yet the call for ASEAN action is a classic piece of that same moralising.
It costs nothing to ask for a meeting, but it risks nothing either. The real intervention needed is not in the diplomatic sphere, but in the market for human dignity. That, however, has no yield curve.
The numbers from Myanmar are not encouraging. The junta’s total disregard for human life is matched only by its disdain for economic reality. With the country effectively cut off from international markets, the only capital that flows is illicit: drugs, jade, and timber.
The massacre of villagers is not a financial event, but it reflects the complete breakdown of governance. In such an environment, the only rational response is to hold one’s nose and hope the contagion does not spread to neighbouring markets. For Britain, that means focusing on the bottom line.
The foreign policy establishment can afford to be outraged. The Treasury cannot. The call for ASEAN intervention is, in the end, a cost-free gesture.
It will not bring the dead back to life, nor will it stabilise the kyat. But it does allow the government to appear to be doing something. And in the world of public relations, that is often seen as a win, even if it is a hollow one.








