Yahoo – AFP,
Hla-Hla Htay, 19 Nov 2014
![]() |
Myanmar's
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi takes part in a press
conference in Yangon,
on November 14, 2014 (AFP Photo/Mandel Ngan)
|
Aung San
Suu Kyi's opposition party admitted Wednesday it cannot win its fight to change
a constitutional provision barring her from Myanmar's presidency, as the
powerful military signalled strong opposition to such amendments.
In a fresh
blow to democracy campaigners after authorities in the former junta-run nation
ruled out major constitutional change before crucial 2015 elections, the party
said it did not have the power to push through reforms in the face of an
effective army veto.
Parliament
has been gripped by a series of fierce debates over the constitution that have
highlighted the glaring divide between reformers from civilian parties and
their counterparts in army uniform, who hold a quarter of all seats.
![]() |
National
League for Democracy (NLD)
spokesman Nyan Win answers questions
during an
interview in Yangon, on Nov. 19,
2014 (AFP Photo/Soe Than Win)
|
Parliamentary
representatives of the military have spoken out in unprecedented numbers in
recent days, voicing staunch opposition to any change that would threaten their
position in the legislature.
"So
why are we working for it? Because we believe in democracy," added Nyan
Win, in some of the party's most downbeat remarks on a charter which many
believe was specifically designed to thwart Suu Kyi's political rise.
Legislators
will choose a new president after the general election in November 2015, which is
seen as a key test of the country's emergence from outright military rule.
Surprise
move
Suu Kyi’s
NLD is expected to win if polls are free and fair.
But the
veteran democracy campaigner cannot stand for the top post because a clause in
the constitution, 59f, bans those with a foreign spouse or children. Her two
sons are British, as was her late husband.
US
President Barack Obama last week raised concerns about the clause, saying
"the amendment process needs to reflect inclusion rather than
exclusion".
Parliament
speaker Shwe Mann said Tuesday a referendum would be held next May on major
charter amendments approved by parliament after the current debates.
But he said
it would be impossible to implement changes until after the election.
The NLD
earlier this year gained five million signatures on a petition to remove the
army's veto on constitutional change.
Nyan Win
said the party would keep campaigning for change and had a back-up plan,
although he declined to elaborate on it.
Activists
at the NLD's Yangon headquarters appeared unfazed earlier Wednesday, selling
Suu Kyi T-shirts and trinkets as normal.
But Myanmar
media sounded the alarm.
"Is
Suu Kyi admitting defeat?" asked the news website Democratic Voice of
Burma.
The
political prisoner-turned-politician Wednesday told reporters on the sidelines
of the parliamentary debate in the capital Naypyidaw that she accepted Shwe
Mann's amendment timetable as "normal procedure".
Fears of
foreign influence
"We
just want the military to be more in line with democratic standards," she
added.
Myanmar's
parliament is dominated by the military and the army-backed ruling party.
Soldiers
owe their place in the legislature to the controversial 2008 constitution,
which was drawn up by the then-junta as it kept critics and opposition
activists locked up.
A vote to
change the constitution's key points requires more than 75 percent support --
thus giving the army the final say.
"We
should keep section 59f the same," Lieutenant Colonel Myo Htet Win told
the house on Wednesday.
He said
that "if a person who has mixed with foreign blood" were to get the
top position, "our nation could swiftly become a puppet government, even
without colonisation".
Myanmar,
formerly known as Burma and ruled by the British until 1948, was plunged into
isolation by a military regime that seized power in 1962.
But in the
past three years, its reforms have earned international praise and the removal
of most sanctions.
The
quasi-civilian leadership, which remains dominated by former generals, has
freed most political prisoners, allowed Suu Kyi and her party into parliament
and ended draconian media censorship.
But last
week Obama added his voice to concerns that the transition is backsliding in
certain areas, including press freedom and human rights.



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.