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Myanmar swears in democracy
Finally, the historic moment was upon Myanmar. Htin Kyaw was sworn in as the first democratically elected President in over 50 years on Wednesday
A close aide to Aung San Suu Kyi, some say it is a role that will see him act as a proxy for the pro-democracy figurehead and carry the hopes of a nation emerging from military rule. Htin Kyaw took the reins from former general Thein Sein who has helmed far-reaching reforms since 2011.
Suu Kyi, 70, the face of Myanmar’s fight for democracy across the world, is barred from becoming president by the junta-scripted constitution but has declared that she will steer the government anyway.
The handover at the junta-built parliament in the capital Naypyidaw marks the final act of a prolonged transition since Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party swept the November elections. The NLD won 80 per cent of parliamentary seats, handing them a massive public mandate to rule.
Wearing a collarless shirt in the NLD’s peach-coloured parliamentary colours, the bespectacled Htin Kyaw pledged to be “faithful to the people of the republic of the union of Myanmar”. “I will uphold and abide by the constitution and its laws. I will carry out my responsibilities uprightly and to the best of my ability,” added the 69-year-old, who is an old school friend of the Nobel Laureate.
The cabinet was sworn in by the speaker in a colourful lineup that included ministers from ethnic regions and a blue-clad Suu Kyi — who holds a clutch of cabinet positions including that of foreign minister.
Yet three men in military uniform were also present at the swearing in — a sign of the enduring stake the army holds inside the new government. The military holds a quarter of all parliamentary seats, another gift of a constitution it scripted.
The Southeast Asian nation of 51 million people is in the throes of a dramatic transformation as it emerges from domination by paranoid and repressive generals who cut the country off from the outside world.
Expectations for an NLD-dominated government run high and the new government faces a steep task. NLD lawmakers also have little practical experience of government.
Some were jailed by the junta, including most famously Suu Kyi who was held under house arrest for her efforts to lead the democracy movement.
Investors and tourists have begun to pile in as many of the junta’s worst repressions have eased promising a better future to a public who now have access to mobile phones, cheaper cars and other coveted consumer goods.
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