New Straits Times

MYANMAR PRESIDENT URGES REFORM OF CONSTITUTI­ON

Htin Kyaw seeks justice for minorities, but does not mention the Rohingya

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YANGON

MYANMAR’S civilian president called in an Independen­ce Day speech yesterday for reform of a military-drafted constituti­on and for justice for all recognised minorities under a federal system, but made no mention of the treatment of its Rohingya Muslim people.

Amending the charter to remove a dominant political role for the military had been one of the most contentiou­s issues facing Myanmar as it emerged from nearly half a century of strict army rule.

The debate over constituti­onal reform, however, had been muted since the assassinat­ion in January last year of a lawyer advising government leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s ruling party on the issue.

“As we build the Democratic Federal Republic, in accordance with the results of the political dialogues, we all need to work collective­ly for creating a suitable constituti­on,” President Htin Kyaw said in his speech marking the 70th anniversar­y of Myanmar’s independen­ce from Britain.

Htin Kyaw’s post is largely ceremonial, but he is a close ally of Suu Kyi. He did not elaborate on what he meant by suitable or spell out why he was suggesting the 2008 constituti­on drawn up by the military was unsuitable.

The constituti­on bars Suu Kyi from becoming president because it ruled out candidates with a foreign spouse or child. Suu Kyi’s late husband was British as are her two sons.

It also reserves for the military one quarter of the seats in Parliament and several major cabinet posts, including defence, interior and border affairs, giving it an effective veto over constituti­onal change and control of security affairs.

Myanmar began emerging from 49 years of military rule in 2011. Suu Kyi’s party swept a 2015 election and formed a government, but concern was growing that the reform programme was stalling or even sliding back.

This had been compounded by attacks on press freedom, including the detention of several journalist­s over the past year. On Dec 12, the authoritie­s arrested two Reuters reporters who had covered the army crackdown that has led to the mass flight of Rohingya residents of Rakhine State across the border into Bangladesh.

Htin Kyaw called for respect for human rights, but he did not refer to the crisis over the exodus of 655,000 Rohingya people, nor to the internatio­nal condemnati­on it has generated.

“We are working for the emergence of a democratic state based on the principles of freedom for all ethnic national races, justice, equality and right of selfdeterm­ination,” he said.

“National race” is a term used by Myanmar referring to what it categorise­s as indigenous ethnic groups. The Rohingya, who have traditiona­lly lived in Rakhine State, had been denied inclusion as authoritie­s regard them as illegal immigrants who have crossed over from Bangladesh.

The Rohingya crisis erupted in August after Rohingya insurgent attacks on security posts in Rakhine State triggered a military response that the United Nations denounced as ethnic cleansing.

Myanmar denied ethnic cleansing, saying its security forces had mounted legitimate clearance operations. Reuters

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Youth playing a pillow fight game on a bamboo pole during festivitie­s marking Myanmar’s 70th Independen­ce Day, on the outskirts of Yangon yesterday.
AFP PIC Youth playing a pillow fight game on a bamboo pole during festivitie­s marking Myanmar’s 70th Independen­ce Day, on the outskirts of Yangon yesterday.

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