Marcos, Hun Sen agree on 'patience' as key to resolving Myanmar crisis
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—​"​Patience​"​ is the key to deal with the deepening crisis in the military junta-ruled Myanmar.
That was what President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen agreed during their bilateral talk here on Thursday at the sidelines of the 40th and 41st Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Summits.
Apart from Hun Sen, Marcos will also talk about his stand on the developments in Myanmar before his other fellow leaders from the regional bloc.

While ASEAN, chaired this year by Cambodia, did not invite any political representative from Myanmar in this year​'s​ summits, the two leaders still believed there is still more they can do ​for the​ military-ruled nation.
​Marcos, for his part, pushed for the need to examine the "dynamics" of politics in Myanmar, while still engaging with it "in every way possible."
"​As​ you have great experience in this matter, perhaps your advice to be patient is the best that we can do right now​," the President told the Cambodian leader at the Peace Palac​e here.​​
​"​But we can still do more in terms of engagement in Myanmar. I'm in full agreement with you, Mr. Prime Minister, that that is the way forward," ​he added.​
​In April 2021, members of the regional bloc came up with a five-point consensus that sought to stop violence in Myanmar and to call for a dialogue among concerned parties.
A year after the agreement, ASEAN leaders are expected to talk about its progress in this year's summits.
​Meanwhile, there was another tension that Marcos discussed with Hun Sen.
In a video message to the media, the President said they talked "at length" about the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which he previously said is affecting the food and energy security as well as the economy.​
​Marcos' meetings with Cambodian representatives, from business leaders to government officials, ​were "very productive," according to the President.
There, he got the nod of his Cambodian partners to strengthen two countries' ties on low-cost housing, digitalization and agriculture.