MYANMAR PICKS A NEW PRESIDENT, BUT HE’LL STILL BE NO. 2
Myanmar’s Parliament chose U Win Myint to be the country’s new president, a mostly ceremonial post. |
A longtime loyalist to Myanmar’s civilian
leader, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, was chosen on Wednesday to be the country’s new
president, a largely ceremonial role in which he is expected to be the official
conduit for her authority.
The new
president, U Win Myint, will succeed U Htin Kyaw, 71, who resigned last week
after two years on the job. Mr. Htin Kyaw was widely regarded as an honest but
powerless functionary who did the bidding of Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel
Peace laureate who has been condemned globally for her acquiescence to the
military’s ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims.
Mr. Win
Myint, a 66-year-old lawyer, is expected to perform in a similar fashion. As
president, he will be constrained by both the military-drafted Constitution and
the strong hand of Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi.
Parliament
chose him from a field of three candidates during a two-hour session in which
his character and qualifications for the job were not mentioned.
Also not
discussed were his stands on such pressing issues as the ethnic cleansing of
the Rohingya in Rakhine State, a growing crackdown on freedom of speech, a
struggling economy and continued fighting between the military and several
ethnic groups.
Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi, 72, made a rare
appearance in Parliament to observe the vote, joined by Mr. Win Myint.
After the vote, reporters asked him to
comment on his election but he merely smiled and waved before leaving.
Mr. Win Myint stepped down last week
as the speaker of Parliament’s lower house in anticipation of his new position.
He is scheduled to be sworn in as president on Friday.
The former president, Mr. Htin Kyaw,
who has been in poor health, did not explain his reason for resigning. But his
wife, Daw Su Su Lwin, who is also a member of Parliament, told reporters last
week that it was not for health reasons and suggested he was not happy in his
role.
“He thinks he should resign, that’s
why he resigned,” she said. “This is all his decision. He never intended to be
president. He hoped that he would have to take the position of president for
only three to six months.”
As with so much about Myanmar, the
political maneuvering is shaped by the military-drafted Constitution.
Among other things, it prohibits Ms.
Aung San Suu Kyi from serving as president because her children are foreign
citizens. After her party’s landslide victory in 2015, she sought to get around
the ban by naming herself state counselor, a post not included in the
Constitution, and declaring herself to be “above the president.”
The Constitution also creates a
divided government in which the army commander in chief appoints a quarter of
Parliament’s members and three powerful cabinet members and reports to no
civilian authority.
Mr. Win Myint has more political
experience than his predecessor and is considered more of an activist. But
analysts said that he was unlikely to make a difference as long as Ms. Aung San
Suu Kyi maintains her grip on the civilian side of government.
“Switching between U Htin Kyaw and U
Win Myint will make no significant change for Myanmar’s democracy,” said U Yan
Myo Thein, an independent political analyst based in Yangon. “There is just a
personality difference.”
David Mathieson, an independent
analyst in Yangon, said Mr. Win Myint was a “true believer” in the party and
would continue in the role Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi had established for the
president as her “human pen.”
“He will do what his leader instructs
him to, and nothing more,” Mr. Mathieson said. “He is there to make the
arrangement constitutional, and to maintain that balance of power between the
civilian and military governments.”
SOURCE: AFP
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