Suu Kyi vows to amend junta-era Constitution

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AP, Yangun :
Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi vowed Monday to push for constitutional amendments to build a true democracy in the Southeast Asian country as it emerges from decades of military control.
Suu Kyi made the comments in a nationally televised address to mark the start of the Buddhist new year, highlighting her hopes for the future and also the difficult tasks ahead for her new government.
“Our policies and principles are to ensure national reconciliation, internal peace, the rule of law, amendments to the constitution and keeping the democratic system dynamic,” she said.
“The constitution needs to be one that will give birth to a genuine democratic union,” she said. “We need constitutional amendments.”
Suu Kyi’s power to change the constitution remains hamstrung by the military, which still retains considerable power in government and parliament. But she has repeatedly said the current constitution – written during the era of military rule – must be revised so the country can move forward.
The constitution reserves key ministerial posts in the Cabinet for the military, which heads the Home Ministry, the Defense Ministry and the Border Affairs Ministry.
It also allots 25 percent of the seats in parliament for military officers, ensuring that no government can amend the constitution without the army’s approval. Suu Kyi has been working to build alliances with the military but has reportedly angered the military with her government’s initial acts since taking power two weeks ago.
Suu Kyi’s party, the National League for Democracy, won a landslide victory in November elections, ushering in the country’s first civilian government after 54 years of direct and indirect military rule.
Suu Kyi is the country’s most popular political figure but was unable to become president because of a clause in the constitution that bars anyone with a foreign spouse or child from holding the job. Her two sons are British, as was her late husband.
To get around that clause, Suu Kyi selected her longtime confidant, Htin Kyaw, to become president. One of his government’s first acts after taking power at the end of March was to give Suu Kyi a newly created position called “state counsellor” which is akin to that of prime minister.
Htin Kyaw’s government has made it a priority to release political prisoners detained during military rule. Prior to the New Year, his administration freed more than 100 political detainees and on Sunday granted amnesty to another 83.
“We will continue to try to release political prisoners, political activists, and students facing trials related to politics,” he said in televised comments Sunday to mark the new year.
Meanwhile, Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi on Monday vowed to press for greater autonomy for the nation’s ethnic minorities, in an early move to soothe the rebellions roiling the country after her party’s ascent to power.
The country has been swept up in optimism for a more peaceful and prosperous future since the National League for Democracy (NLD) took power from the military on April 1.But the democracy figurehead warned Myanmar’s prospects pivot on ending ethnic conflicts that have blistered the country since its independence in 1948.
To do so, the NLD government would seek “a real federal democratic union”, she said in a televised address marking Myanmar’s New Year.
“Peace and a federal democratic union are closely intertwined and that’s why we need to change the constitution. The most important thing is national reconciliation.”
They were Suu Kyi’s first major comments as “state counsellor”-a role she took on following the handover from an army that dominated the country for 50 years.
The current charter, penned by the military in 2008, centralises power.
The former junta in part justified its tight control of the country with fears that ethnic divisions would fracture the nation.
But federalism has gradually become central to peace discussions steered by a quasi-civilian government that replaced outright military rule in 2011.
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