Gulf News

Myanmar leaders in power handover talks

INCOMING NLD NEEDS WORKING RELATIONSH­IP WITH MILITARY

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Myanmar’s democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi held talks yesterday with the military establishm­ent on the handover of power, the first such discussion­s since her opposition party cleaned up at the polls.

Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party won nearly 80 per cent of contested seats in a November 8 election that appears set to end the military’s decades-long chokehold on the country.

Immediatel­y after her party’s win, Suu Kyi appealed for “national reconcilia­tion” talks with President Thein Sein and the powerful army chief.

Both men have congratula­ted her on the NLD’s victory and vowed to ensure a smooth transition of power to an elected opposition — an unpreceden­ted act in the country’s history.

But opposition supporters remain wary of a military that has duped them before and retains significan­t political clout, including a quarter of all parliament­ary seats.

Suu Kyi, 70, is also barred from the presidency by the constituti­on, while new NLD lawmakers are not due to take their seats until at least February, making for a nervous few months of transition.

The NLD won a similar scale landslide in 1990 polls, only to see the military annul the result and dig in for another two decades. Yesterday morning, Suu Kyi spent 45 minutes in the capital Naypyidaw with Thein Sein, a former top junta general who has shed his uniform to steer reforms over recent years.

The pair smiled as they shook hands for the cameras before the closed-door session began.

“They discussed the peaceful transfer to the next government. The discussion was warm and open,” Informatio­n Minister Ye Htut, who was at the meeting, told reporters.

“We have no tradition of the peaceful (power) transfer to a new elected government since we gained independen­ce in 1948. We will establish this tradition without fail,” he added.

Later she met the army chief Min Aung Hlaing for about an hour in another closed session.

Their discussion­s are a sign she is ready to do business with a military that once held her under house arrest.

Neither the NLD nor the army would immediatel­y comment on the substance of the talks.

Observers have praised Myanmar for holding a peaceful and broadly free and fair election after half a century of authoritar­ian rule.

There are major challenges ahead, not least for the NLD’s lawmakers, who are political novices in a country beset by poverty, corruption and weak governance. Suu Kyi is also desperate to amend the constituti­on, specifical­ly the clause that bars her from top office for having foreign sons — her two children are British.

But as the magnetic force of a generation-long democracy movement she has vowed to rule from “above the president”, indicating she will appoint a proxy to the role to circumvent the charter block.

Opposition supporters remain wary of a military that has duped them before and retains significan­t political clout, including a quarter of all parliament­ary seats.

 ?? AP ?? Tricky transition Aung San Suu Kyi and Myanmar’s Gen Min Aung Hlaing, the military commander-in-chief, during their meeting yesterday. The leaders discussed the transfer of power following a landslide election win by Suu Kyi’s party.
AP Tricky transition Aung San Suu Kyi and Myanmar’s Gen Min Aung Hlaing, the military commander-in-chief, during their meeting yesterday. The leaders discussed the transfer of power following a landslide election win by Suu Kyi’s party.

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