Los Angeles Times

Suu Kyi’s friend wins presidency

The first civilian to hold the office in Myanmar is expected to take direction from the democracy icon.

- By Shashank Bengali shashank.bengali@latimes.com Twitter: @SBengali

MUMBAI, India — A childhood friend of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi was elected Tuesday as Myanmar’s new president, a major step for a country ruled or partially ruled by the military for more than half a century.

Htin Kyaw, 69, the first civilian to hold the presidency, was selected by lawmakers in Myanmar’s capital, Naypyidaw, after parliament­ary elections in November in which Suu Kyi’s pro- democracy opposition party won by a landslide.

The choice marks a significan­t milestone for Myanmar, also known as Burma. Beginning in 2011, ruling generals began implementi­ng democratic reforms, which prompted the United States and other countries to lift long- standing economic sanctions.

“This is a victory for the people of this country,” Htin Kyaw told reporters in brief remarks.

Htin Kyaw is expected to take direction from Suu Kyi, who said before the November elections that she would hold a position “above the president” if her National League for Democracy, or NLD, party won a majority. The former military government barred Suu Kyi, a former political prisoner, from ascending to the country’s highest office by institutin­g a law disqualify­ing anyone with foreign family members. Suu Kyi’s late husband was British.

“He will be a most obedi- ent servant for Aung San Suu Kyi,” Robert San Aung, a human rights lawyer, said by phone from Yangon.

Htin Kyaw, a member of the NLD executive committee, was hardly a household name in Myanmar, and even after his selection Tuesday, news outlets were struggling to confirm pieces of his biography.

A resume posted on Facebook by a party official said Htin Kyaw earned a master’s degree in econom- ics from Yangon University before working in economic affairs for the Foreign Ministry in the 1980s. The party did not confirm whether the biography was official.

He has won praise for being a loyal member of Suu Kyi’s party, which has led the struggle for democratic rule for decades. He is a director at a charitable foundation named for Suu Kyi’s mother and remained close to her when she was placed under house arrest by the generals, even being jailed himself when he once attempted to accompany her on a trip to the city of Mandalay.

Historian Thant Myint- U called him “a very nice man” of “unimpeacha­ble integrity.”

Under Myanmar’s system, the president is chosen by the parliament, which reserves one- quarter of the seats for the military. Htin Kyaw ( pronounced “Chaw”) was nominated by Suu Kyi’s party and won 360 of 652 votes cast by lawmakers Tuesday.

A candidate chosen by the military bloc, Myint Swe, won the second most votes and will become the first vice president. Myint Swe remains on a U. S. government blacklist because of his ties to former military leader Than Shwe, a sign of the continued challenges to U. S. efforts to reengage with Myanmar.

It remained unclear whether Suu Kyi would hold any position in the new government. Analysts said she was likely to serve as a kind of puppet master, determinin­g the party’s political agenda, including rapprochem­ent with the outside world and jump- starting a long- isolated economy.

Many of Myanmar’s 53 million people are expecting significan­t changes, but under military rule, public institutio­ns ceased to func- tion effectivel­y. Suu Kyi has issued only vague policy ideas, and analysts say it remains to be seen whether her party can make the transition from pro- democracy activism to competent governance.

“Odds are that the NLD’s economic goals will not be met” because Myanmar’s state institutio­ns “are not up to the job,” Lex Rieffel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington, wrote in a commentary.

The government will also have to contend with pressure from China, which grew close to the military government and has also courted Suu Kyi. In recent weeks, Chinese officials have signaled that they will try to restart constructi­on on the Myitsone dam, a mammoth hydropower project on Myanmar’s Irrawaddy River that was suspended f ive years ago because of intense domestic opposition.

Suu Kyi has not taken a public stance on the proposed 3,000- megawatt dam, which would export nearly all of its electricit­y into China’s Yunnan province. Green activists say it would give China outsize control of the Irrawaddy, an essential source of water and f ish for Myanmar’s southern delta.

 ?? Aung Shine Oo
Associated Press ?? HTIN KYAW, left, newly elected president of Myanmar, with National League for Democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, at parliament in the capital, Naypyidaw.
Aung Shine Oo Associated Press HTIN KYAW, left, newly elected president of Myanmar, with National League for Democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, at parliament in the capital, Naypyidaw.

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