HomeNewsOpinionWhat explains the junta’s continued hold on power in Myanmar?

What explains the junta’s continued hold on power in Myanmar?

The military leadership in Myanmar no longer faces the older limitations of being a pariah or facing the powerful opposition from Aung San Suu Kyi as in the early 1990s 

February 03, 2021 / 17:38 IST
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REUTERS
REUTERS

The February 1 pre-dawn coup saw the historic third chapter for building democracy in Myanmar coming to an unceremonious end. At 7AM, all television stations went off air as military-owned Myawaddy TV announced that State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint had been detained and military-appointed first Vice-President Myint Swe (now acting President) had, as per constitution, handed over power to Commander-In-Chief General Min Aung Hlaing.

February 1 was when the newly-elected Parliament was to begin its first session, but 64-year-old Hlaing — commander since 2011 and due to retire in July — was conferred unlimited legislative, administrative and judicial powers with a state of emergency declared for one year. The 24-member council of ministers is replaced by his new 11-member team. Most banks are closed, Internet and phone services are restricted and night curfew is imposed in major towns ensuring no protests, thus portraying it as peaceful transition.

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The international community has reacted with muted condemnation. While the world remains preoccupied with COVID-19, the military in Myanmar made advance preparations, including heavy urban deployments, easily upstaging the civilian leadership. Chairing his new administration team Hlaing has pledged to build ‘genuine discipline, flourishing multi-party system’ with a promise of free and fair elections.

Things had been heating up since the November elections, but world powers failed to take note of it. Even the outrage against the military crackdown on the Rohingya — triggering the United States to blacklist Hlaing, or others wanting to strip Suu Kyi of her Noble Peace Prize — had dissipated. But popular mood inside Myanmar chose to strengthen Suu Kyi's National Democratic League (NLD) to outvote Myanmar's military junta.