Cape Times

Bid to remove military legislativ­e veto fails

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NAYPYITAW: A move to amend Myanmar’s constituti­on to remove the military’s legislativ­e veto on key decisions fell short of the required 75 percent support in parliament yesterday, preserving the armed forces’ powerful political stake.

The failure to trim the share of house votes needed to amend the constituti­on to 70 percent was no surprise given that unelected members of the military, which ruled Myanmar for half a century until 2011, hold a quarter of the seats.

Another vote on a clause that effectivel­y bars Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi from becoming president also fell short of the support needed. The motion voted on would have only partially amended that clause, however, meaning the 70-year-old democracy icon would still have been ineligible had it been passed.

Suu Kyi, whose National League for Democracy (NLD) won the last free election by a landslide in 1990 – a result ignored by the junta – cannot become president because her two children are British citizens, as was her late husband.

The NLD suffered persecutio­n under the former junta and says the military’s ability to shoot down changes to the constituti­on puts a limit on democratic reforms in Myanmar, where a general election is expected in November.

Critics see it as an enshrined safeguard to protect the armed forces’ sizeable economic and political interests.

Just one of the proposed changes voted on yesterday was accepted, a minor tweak to a clause that requires a presidenti­al candidate to be “wellacquai­nted” with various affairs, removing the word “military” and replacing it with “defence”. Any approved changes require endorsemen­t in a public referendum.

The NLD’s attempts to change the constituti­on prior to the election have met with resistance from the military and ruling Union Solidarity and Developmen­t Party. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? ‘DEMOCRACY ICON’: Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi speaks during a news conference after parliament voted not to relax the military’s control over the constituti­on, a move that could have paved the way to allow her to run for president.
Picture: EPA ‘DEMOCRACY ICON’: Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi speaks during a news conference after parliament voted not to relax the military’s control over the constituti­on, a move that could have paved the way to allow her to run for president.

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