President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has conveyed to his
Myanmar counterpart his concerns about the deadly outbreak of
anti-Muslim unrest in the former military-ruled nation, Indonesia's top
diplomat said Wednesday.
The leader of the world's most populous
Muslim country discussed the sectarian violence with President Thein
Sein during a visit Tuesday to Myanmar, Indonesian Foreign Minister
Marty Natalegawa told reporters on the sidelines of a Southeast Asian
diplomatic summit in Brunei's capital.
The two leaders also discussed Myanmar's widely praised democratic reforms, Natalegawa said.
Natalegawa,
who accompanied Yudhoyono to Myanmar, said Indonesia was confident that
Thein Sein's government "is trying to do the right thing in terms of
getting the communal conflict under control."
Indonesia and
Thailand, who along with Myanmar are members of the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations, separately offered their help to Thein Sein's
government.
Indonesian and Thai diplomats said it was unclear
whether the sectarian violence in Myanmar would be discussed during a
summit of ASEAN leaders in Bandar Seri Begawan on Thursday.
The
summit will focus on long-simmering territorial disputes and a plan by
Southeast Asian nations to turn their region into a European Union-like
community by the end of 2015, Natalegawa said.
A Myanmar diplomat,
Aung Lynn, said the deadly sectarian attacks were a domestic issue that
his government has been trying to resolve.
The spread of
sectarian violence has posed one of the greatest challenges yet to Thein
Sein's nascent government. Myanmar's Rakhine state was shaken twice by
anti-Muslim violence last year. In March, the deadly unrest spread for
the first time to central Myanmar.
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