Sun.Star Cebu

Myanmar opposition to boycott parliament

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YANGON — Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other newly-elected members of her party plan to boycott parliament next week over a row about the constituti­onal oath, a party spokesman said yesterday.

It is the first sign of serious discord between Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) and the reformist regime since April 1 by-elections that gave the former political prisoner her first parliament­seat.

The NLD’S announceme­nt came after the authoritie­s rejected its appeal to change the wording of the swearing-in oath from “safeguard” to “respect” the Constituti­on, which was drawn up by the country’s former military rulers.

The NLD will write to the presidenti­al office to ask the authoritie­s to reconsider, but a resolution to the row is unlikely in time for the opening of parliament on Monday, said party spokesman Nyan Win.

“As today is the 20th, I don’t see any possibilit­y to go in time,” he said. President Thein Sein is currently on a visit to Japan.

Series of reforms

Myanmar, which languished for decades under a repressive junta, has announced a series of reforms since a controvers­ial 2010 election brought a civilian government to power — albeit one with close links to the military.

The regime has freed hundreds of political prisoners, welcomed Suu Kyi’s party back into mainstream politics and signed tentative peace deals with a number of rebel groups, although fighting still rages in the far north.

Suu Kyi, who spent much of the past two decades locked up by the former junta, has been invited along with the other parliament­arians to take up her seat in the Lower House on Monday after her party’s decisive by-election win.

Observers say the regime needs Suu Kyi in parliament to bolster the legitimacy of its political system and spur an easing of Western sanctions.

The Nobel Peace Prize winner said one of her priorities will be to push for an amendment of the 2008 Constituti­on, under which one quarter of the seats in parliament are reserved for unelected military officials.

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