Myanmar opposition ask US Fed to ‘virtually’ unfreeze US$1 billion in assets
- If the opposition can get US cooperation, they would establish a new central bank that could issue a digital currency backed by frozen funds
- The amount sought is part of Myanmar’s reserves that were frozen when the country’s armed forces seized power in last year’s coup

“We just need the US blessing that allows us to use the frozen money virtually,” Tin Tun Naing, the exiled National Unity Government’s minister of planning, finance and investment, said in a video interview from an undisclosed location.
The amount sought by the exiled opposition leaders is part of Myanmar’s reserves that have been frozen by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York since February 2021, when the country’s armed forces seized power from the democratically elected government.
If the exiles can get US support, they would then seek to establish a new central bank that could issue the digital currency to help support the opposition’s “revolutionary efforts”, Tin Tun Naing said. He described the plan to issue currency against the reserves as a more feasible alternative to asking the US to free the cash entirely.
“We know perfectly well that the US is not going to release it in the foreseeable future but we are aiming at making use of these frozen assets virtually,” he said. “This means that we will use this as our foreign reserves when the Central Bank of NUG is established.”