Although Suu Kyi has won an overwhelming victory, it is not going to be easy to translate this victory into political gains, reports Aditi Phadnis
What are the implications of the landslide victory of Aung San Suu Kyi-led National League of Democracy for Myanmar and the South Asian region? More complex than we think.
Although Suu Kyi and the NLD have won an overwhelming victory, it is not going to be easy to translate this victory into political gains. Since one-fourth of the seats in both houses of Parliament (the assembly of the Union, or Hluttaw) are allocated to the military, the NLD will have to win two-thirds of the seats in Sunday’s vote to assure itself of a Parliamentary majority. Previous elections show this is not wholly impossible.
In 1990, the NLD had won 79 per cent of the seats, and in 2012, it got 95 per cent of the seats, on offer; although the latter election was more limited and took place in NLD strongholds. The votes are still being counted and the final result will be in on November 22. However, the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party has conceded defeat. So, despite the fact that Suu Kyi cannot assume the top position (she is barred by the Constitution), it is clear that she will be in a position to direct Myanmar, even without holding the top position.
Amendments to the clauses in the Constitution preventing Suu Kyi from becoming president and requiring 75 per cent of votes in Parliament to allow amendments were blocked by the military (which reserves 25 per cent of the seats for its own appointments) in July 2015. Even with two-thirds of the seats, it won’t be easy for Suu Kyi to lead Myanmar into the transition from a military republic to a full democracy.
There are misgivings about the NLD as well. Not a single Muslim candidate was fielded by the NLD. Rohingya Muslims have been disenfranchised. Democratic participation in as many as 400 villages in ethnic states including Kachin and Karen was ‘suspended’ on grounds of security. So we don’t really know whom these villages have voted for.
Moreover, the military may have withdrawn from the active political arena but NLD will still have to negotiate with it.
There is an international factor as well. Both China and India have interest in Myanmar. With the military withdrawing, China is worried about the assets it has created in Myanmar -- from the suspension of the Myitsone hydropower project after power was nominally handed to a civilian government in 2011, to the recent cross-border spillover of military action taken by Myanmar’s armed forces against the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, an ethnic Chinese insurgent group in the Kokang Special Region.
Possibly assessing that the NLD might be growing in popularity and public acceptability, China invited Suu Kyi on a visit earlier this year that was red carpet by any stretch of imagination.
Says former ambassador M K Bhadrakumar: “Suu Kyi arrived in Beijing on June 10 on her first visit to China, a five-day visit, and by the second day, Chinese President Xi Jinping had received her at the Great Hall of the People. By that time, she had talked business with China’s foreign policy focused State Councillor Yang Jiechi. As a western report promptly took note, ‘That is the kind of all-star line-up usually lined up (by Beijing) for major national leaders, not opposition party figures’.” There is a kind of competition now on to gain Myanmar’s favours. The fact is, till the full result is out, we will not know who the ruling party is - and who the opposition is. Crowding the opposition space is also a nationalist Buddhist party. With such complex politics, there can be no simple solutions in deepening friendship with a country that is of great strategic importance to India.
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