Myanmar's
leader has coordinated a significant cabinet reshuffle, as the country edges
towards political reform. Reformists have been promoted and conservatives have
been demoted in the overhaul.
Myanmar's
president Thein Sein reshuffled his cabinet on Monday, according to his office.
The political maneuver had been long-anticipated and has been greeted as a sign
that reform is starting to take root in the country.
Thein Sein,
a former general, gave four of his key ministers a joint additional role as
minister of the president's office. Thein Sein's aides said the appointment was
with a view to speeding up the current pace of reform in Myanmar. Those
appointed to the position include Railway Minister Aung Min, Finance Minister
Hla Tun and Industry Minister Soe Thein. The latter two in particular are
thought to have been instrumental in the introduction of recent economic
reforms in Myanmar.
"They
will work for the president. So the president will only need to make final
decisions and he will have more time to work on the important matters,"
said a top government official.
Labor
Minister Aung Kyi is also set to take on the role of information minister,
replacing Kyaw Hsan, a hard-liner who had experienced thorny relations with the
country's media. Aung Kyi was previously the former junta's official liaison to
Aung San Suu Kyi when the democratic figurehead was under house arrest.
With
opposition to reforms from the more conservative elements of government and
parliament enduring, the reshuffle is the latest chapter in Myanmar's
incremental but tangible move towards democratization. Since taking up the
presidency last year, Thein Sein has overseen a number of major changes in the
country, from setting hundreds of political prisoners free to electing Suu Kyi
to parliament.
sej/ccp (AFP, AP)

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