Yahoo – AFP,
March 31, 2016
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| Vietnam's newly elected National Assembly's Chairwoman Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan, 61, is sworn in during a ceremony at the parliament house in Hanoi, on March 31, 2016 (AFP Photo) |
Communist
Vietnam named a woman for the first time to the influential role of chairperson
in its rubber stamp National Assembly Thursday -- the country's fourth most
powerful position -- state media said.
Veteran
lawmaker and senior Communist Party official Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan was elected
with 95.5 percent of votes after a poll in the country's 500-strong legislative
body early Thursday, state-run VTV said.
"I
would like to thank the National Assembly for electing me," Ngan said
after the ballot, which was broadcast on VTV.
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Nguyen Thi
Kim Ngan, new chairperson
of Vietnam's rubber stamp National
Assembly, is the
highest ranking female
party official (AFP Photo/Minh Hoang)
|
Ngan, 61,
was selected for the National Assembly chair position in January during the
five-yearly Communist Party Congress, which was this year overshadowed by
factional fighting.
No other
candidates were on the ballot paper and some 472 out of the 484 lawmakers
present on voted in her favour, VTV said.
Her
appointment means she is the highest ranking female party official.
The
majority of Communist Party officials are men, but women are reasonably well
represented in the ranks, with around 25 percent of National Assembly delegates
being female.
Vietnam is
in the midst of a leadership handover after the country's top communist leader,
Nguyen Phu Trong, was reelected as party secretary general in January in a
victory for the party's old guard.
Reformist
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung lost out in internal party elections and is due
to step down next week, when the National Assembly will vote on his
replacement.
This is
expected to be Nguyen Xuan Phuc, currently a deputy prime minister, state media
said.
On Saturday,
the National Assembly will also elect a new president, expected to be Tran Dai
Quang, a police general who rose through the ranks within the country's
powerful Ministry of Public Security.
Political
analyst Pham Chi Dung told AFP that Ngan's election as National Assembly chair
was a strategic choice by the party to ensure a power balance between the
country's key regions.
"It's
no breakthrough," for gender equality, he said. "Ngan is from
(Vietnam's) south and has support from (party secretary) Trong and (Prime
Minister) Dung," he said.
Only a
handful of the 19-member politburo, including Ngan, are from the country's
south, analyst Dung said.
Vietnam
fought a bitter decades long war pitting the communist north over the US-backed
southern regime, which ended with a communist victory and reunification in
1975.
The ruling
Communist Party strives to ensure a power balance between the key northern,
central, and southern regions, often dividing top political appointments along
geographical lines.
In the
past, the leadership handover is decided in at the party congress and takes up
to six months to be confirmed by the National Assembly.
Analysts
say this year things have moved more quickly, partly because several top
leaders are retiring from politics, and also because of an upcoming visit by US
President Barack Obama in May.


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