Khaleej Times

Myanmar MPs give nod to charter change effort

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naypytaw — Myanmar’s parliament voted Tuesday to create a committee to propose amendments to the country’s military-enacted constituti­on, which grants the armed forces the power to block any change.

The proposal to form the committee was presented by a member of the ruling National League for Democracy party of leader Aung San Suu Kyi, which took power in 2016 after more than five decades of military or military-backed rule.

The 2008 constituti­on gives the military control of national security ministries and 25 percent of legislativ­e seats, enough to prevent any constituti­onal changes, which require the support of more than 75 percent of lawmakers.

The committee proposal required a simple majority to pass. Military lawmakers boycotted the vote, saying it violated parliament­ary procedures for changing the constituti­on. Brig. Gen. Maung Maung, one of the military representa­tives in parliament, said the objection was not against proposing changes, but rather against setting up a committee to do so.

With the high bar set for changing the constituti­on and no sign that the military wants to give up its considerab­le power, it was unclear if the move by Suu Kyi’s ruling party was only symbolic, signaling its intentions ahead of the next general election in 2020.

Constituti­onal amendment was one of the campaign promises made by her party in 2015, along with rule by law and ending armed conflict with ethnic minority groups. The party circulated public petitions calling for amending the constituti­on that received millions of signatures. —

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