Burma’s opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) party is to convene a plenary meeting with 120 senior members at the end of this month where they will likely decide on whether to run for elections this year.
The elections are beset by controversy, not least because detained NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi is barred from participating.
Election laws announced last week also state that her party must expel Suu Kyi if it wants to compete, and officially annul the result of Burma’s last elections in 1990, which the NLD won by a landslide.
The party’s 20-strong Central Executive Committee (CEC) met yesterday to formalise plans to hold the plenary meeting on 29 March, which will incorporate another 108 Central Committee (CC) members.
“We called a special joint CEC-CC meeting and discussed the laws recently announced by the [government] which are very crucial for us,” said CEC member Ohn Kyaing. “We brainstormed ways to make our stand and what to do.”
He said that the plenary meeting will include party members from different administrative regions in Burma and will decide on whether to register the party for elections, rumoured to be in October this year.
He added that the majority of the NLD’s 300 offices have been reopened and work had resumed after permission was granted by the government. The offices were closed in the wake of the 2003 Depayin massacre, in which 70 NLD supporters were beaten to death by a junta-backed mob.
But the government’s decision to allow the offices to reopen appears to conflict with election laws that much of the international community has condemned for the severe restrictions they place on opposition contenders.
The Philippines’ foreign secretary Alberto Romulo yesterday said that the laws were “contrary to the ‘road map to democracy’ that they [Burmese junta] pledged to [the Association of Southeast Asian Nations] and to the world”.
He added that he would directly press his Burmese counterpart, Nyan Win, during a meeting this week in Manila of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM).
Tags: Elections, NLD, Philippines, Suu
MPs returned to Parliament in Burma’s capital Naypyidaw
The blog owner requires users to be logged in to be able to vote for this post.
Alternatively, if you do not have an account yet you can create one here.
Powered by Vote It Up
To begin with the NLD is not the opposition in Burma, they are the government. Thitsaphout Than Shwe wants to annul the results of 1990 landslide which swept President Elect Daw Aung San Su Kyi into government. Thitsaphout Than Shwe must stand trail for every illegal act he and his criminal associates have ever committed.
I and everyone knows that the result of this years sham and very illegal election is a forgone conclusion. Even if Thitsaphout Than Shwe gets one vote only he will simply lie and tell the world he won the election, an invasion force is coming to get you Thitsaphout Than Shwe.
What kind of decision are they going to make? In fact, the future of any party led by DASSK is already decided by THAN SHWE—DISSOLUTION. The name ( NLD) might be used by other old GONERS, but DASSK political role in Burma will soon be meaningless (until she becomes realistic or pragmatic). Now, what can she do inside Burma? What can people of Burma do while she is inside Burma? What can exile Burmese political activists do while she is inside Burma. Practically NOTHING. By the way, look at this statement “The NLD stance until now has been to adhere to last April’s “Shwegondaing Declaration,” calling for a review of the Constitution, political dialogue and the unconditional release of all political prisoners, including Suu Kyi.” What hold do they have to make this REGIME give in to those DEMANDS? This regime will not give in anything unless we have something which can frighten them. The QUESTION is which one and how can we get that to frighten them? It is now VERY IMPORTANT to have freedom while THAN SHWE is still in power otherwise it will take another 20 years to get freedom if another new DICTATOR overpowers THAN SHWE. Every DICTATOR’S life span for their dictatorship is, in fact, short lived (average 25 years). NE WIN-30 years. SAW MAUNG—a few years, now, THAN SHWE has already spent 20 years. His END-TIME is just at the corner. Watch out! Another MILITARY COUP is coming and another NE WIN-THAN SHWE STYLE dictator is already waiting for his turn. BE PREPARE!
mr moe win, nothing gonna change inside burma as long as people are afraid of army junta and their guns, few brave people are in jail now.NOTHING GONNA CHANGE,