Myanmar's former junta chief kicks off visit to China as civilian president

Myanmar's former junta chief kicks off visit to China as civilian president

Add Bangkok Post as a preferred source on Google
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi welcomes Myanmar President Gen Min Aung Hlaing as he arrives for a meeting at the Hyderabad House in New Delhi on June 1, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi welcomes Myanmar President Gen Min Aung Hlaing as he arrives for a meeting at the Hyderabad House in New Delhi on June 1, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

BEIJING - Myanmar's Min ​Aung Hlaing arrived in Beijing on Monday for a five-day ​visit at the invitation of ‌Chinese leader Xi Jinping, China's state media reported, marking his first trip to the world's second-largest economy since being elected president.

Gen Min Aung Hlaing, 69, the former junta ​chief who ⁠was the architect of a 2021 coup that led to civil war in Myanmar and a wave of international sanctions, was ‌elected president in early April by a parliament packed with military loyalists.

His journey from top general to civilian president formalised his hold on ⁠power after a coup that ended a decade of tentative democracy and sparked an exodus of foreign investors from what was once one of Asia's most promising frontier markets.

During his visit this week, Gen Min ​Aung Hlaing will hold talks with Xi. He will also meet with China's No. 2 and No. ​3, ‌Premier Li Qiang and Zhao Leji, the country's top legislator.

"China and Myanmar have stood together through thick ​and thin, ⁠looked out for each other and forged solidarity and cooperation, promoting China-Myanmar relations to achieve considerable ⁠progress," a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said last week.

China was not the first country that Gen Min Aung Hlaing has visited since becoming president.

At the end ⁠of May, the former military commander-in-chief embarked on ​a five-day visit to India, with which Myanmar shares a long and porous border, as part of a broader effort to reengage with the rest ‌of the world ⁠after years of isolation caused ​by international sanctions.

Subscribe to our newsletters for daily updates, breaking news and exclusive content.

Please put in a valid-email.
You must agree before subscribing.