In Myanmar, a Soft Coup Ahead of an Election
By MIN ZINSEPT. 11, 2015
By MIN ZINSEPT. 11, 2015
Campaigning
formally started on Tuesday for Myanmar’s first general election since
the end of direct military rule, but don’t be fooled by the display of
colorful logos and slogans from various political parties: The army is
back in force.
Military
apparatchiks in the nominally democratic government have refused to
amend the Constitution to allow the opposition leader Daw Aung San Suu
Kyi to run for the presidency. Last month, Thura Shwe Mann — a rival of
President Thein Sein, a high-ranking general in the previous military
government — was forcibly removed from his position as chairman of the
ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party (U.S.D.P.).
The
purge was more than standard internecine strife; it was an internal
coup by the president and his traditional backers, mostly among the
military. It was also a sign that with an election just weeks away, the
army is eager to reassert control over Myanmar’s political process, and
remind all contenders for power that it will allow liberalization only
so long as reform ushers in what top generals have called a
“discipline-flourishing democracy.”
The rivalry between Mr. Thein Sein and Mr. Shwe Mann, also a senior general in the former junta, is long-standing.
But
lately Mr. Shwe Mann had proved too good at leveraging his position as
speaker of the lower house of Parliament to cater to the clientelistic
interests of some legislators, offering them higher salaries and
pork-barrel spending. He had also been building bridges with the
opposition and had dared to challenge the military directly.
Some
weeks ago, the army chief wrote a three-page letter to Mr. Shwe Mann
detailing his missteps: among other things, supporting Ms. Aung San Suu
Kyi’s call for a high-level political dialogue, and backing a bill
proposing to lift the army’s veto authority over constitutional reform.
In late July, the army circulated a petition to impeach him.
When
last month Mr. Shwe Mann and other U.S.D.P. leaders rejected more than
half of the retired senior officers the army had preselected as
candidates to put on the party’s ticket for the November election, the
generals had had enough. Late at night on Aug. 12, the Ministry of Home
Affairs, which is directly controlled by the military, sent some 400
police officers to surround U.S.D.P. headquarters and obtain Mr. Shwe
Mann’s demotion.
That
show of force smacked of the strong-arm tactics favored by the old
junta. Thura Aung Ko, an ally of Mr. Shwe Mann who was also recently
sacked from a senior position at the U.S.D.P., told the media that Than
Shwe, the general who led Myanmar from 1992 to 2011, probably had played
a role in the purge. Party insiders I have spoken to over the past few
weeks said the same thing.
U
Htay Oo, who now chairs the U.S.D.P. along with Mr. Thein Sein, told me
that Mr. Than Shwe regards the party — whose predecessor he founded two
decades ago — as his brainchild, and that he had planned for it and the
army to jointly run Myanmar for several decades after the country’s
ostensible move toward democracy in 2010. Mr. Shwe Mann’s rising
influence seems to have forced Mr. Than Shwe’s hand, convincing him that
the military needed to step in to save his vision of the U.S.D.P.
Mr.
Shwe Mann has remained speaker since being deposed as party leader.
(There are rules about how to strip him of that post, and the army
apparently is bashful enough not to bypass them.) He has been keeping a
low profile. Yet to the dismay of the military and the party’s new
leaders, Parliament voted to suspend discussion of a bill proposing his
impeachment: Mr. Shwe Mann’s power may have been undercut, but he does
not stand alone. Distrust between the army and civilian politicians has
continued to grow in the meantime, as the military has resumed pushing
for more senior officers to be included on the U.S.D.P.’s ticket.
When
the people of Myanmar vote on Nov. 8, they will be electing
representatives for 75 percent of the seats in Parliament; under the
Constitution the other 25 percent are reserved for the army. All
legislators will then elect the president by a simple majority from
among three vice presidential candidates: two nominated by each house of
Parliament, the third designated by the military.
Ms.
Aung San Suu Kyi cannot be a candidate for the presidency, but her
party, the National League for Democracy, is nonetheless expected to do
well in the popular vote — and perhaps well enough to have some clout in
choosing the next president. Except that, of course, with the
military’s one-quarter quota of the seats in Parliament, the system is
inherently stacked against the opposition.
To
win the presidency, the candidate backed by the N.L.D. and its allies
would need to secure a supermajority among the nonmilitary members of
Parliament. Yet a candidate from the U.S.D.P. who was endorsed by the
army, being assured the votes of military representatives, could become
president even if the party lost the popular vote.
Mr.
Thein Sein’s putsch against Mr. Shwe Mann put a dent in the legitimacy
of the government — which is now redoubling efforts to secure a major
cease-fire agreement with ethnic armed groups so it can claim to have
ended Myanmar’s long-running civil war. But by sidelining a leading
figure of the U.S.D.P. whom Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi had called an ally, the
president managed to undermine two rivals at once while consolidating
his ties with the military. The army, for its part, is once again
manipulating Myanmar’s political scene to ensure that it remains in
charge, election or not.
Min
Zin is a contributor to Foreign Policy’s blog Democracy Lab, and serves
as a Myanmar expert for think tanks and NGOs like Freedom House.

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