Event Recording / Asia 08 April 2024 1 minute Scam Centres, Ceasefires and Distrust: China-Myanmar Relations Since the Coup In this online event, experts discuss the current state of China-Myanmar relations, Beijing’s tacit support for the rebel offensive launched on 27 October in Myanmar’s northeast, and the implications for international policy on Myanmar. Share Facebook Twitter Email Linkedin Whatsapp Save Print China has more leverage in Myanmar than any other foreign power. While it cannot dictate outcomes, it has significant influence over events.In this online event, Crisis Group’s Senior Adviser on Myanmar, Richard Horsey, is joined by external experts to discuss the current state of China-Myanmar relations, Beijing’s tacit support for the rebel offensive launched on 27 October in Myanmar’s northeast, and the implications for international policy on Myanmar.The panel discussed the proliferation of scam centres in Myanmar in recent years, the impact this has had on Chinese policy and its acquiescence to the offensive led by ethnic armed groups on its border in a blitzkrieg operation that delivered some of the Myanmar military’s most humiliating defeats in its history. The event follows the launch of our briefing Scam Centres and Ceasefires: China-Myanmar Ties Since the Coup. Loading Video Related Tags Contributors Richard Horsey Senior Adviser, Myanmar rshorsey Enze Han ssociate Professor at the Department of Politics and Public Administration at Hong Kong University Gwen Robinson Editor-at-large, Nikkei Asian Review More for you Op-Ed / Asia Myanmar Is Fragmenting—but Not Falling Apart Originally published in Foreign Affairs Briefing / Asia Ethnic Autonomy and its Consequences in Post-coup Myanmar Also available in Also available in Burmese, Chinese, Simplified