NLD close to deciding on registration

By JOSEPH ALLCHIN
Published: 5 November 2011

Suu Kyi is believed to be keen on registering the party again (Reuters)

An amendment to the electoral law has passed through parliament, with key changes that were suggested by the National League for Democracy (NLD) and that would allow the party to take part in an upcoming by-election.

The party is now waiting for a copy of the new law before its central executive committee will vote on whether the NLD shall re-enter the fray. Key players however remain divided. Aung San Suu Kyi is said to be a proponent, whilst veteran founding member, Win Tin, has expressed ambivalence.

“I don’t think it is really good to go into parliament,” he told DVB.

The key amendments however include the removal of the crucial clause that had said that “all political prisoners must be expelled from the NLD,” explains Win Tin. Further the clause that parties shall “preserve and defend” the 2008 constitution, which would have been impossible for the party to abide by as they have repeatedly voiced their opposition to key elements of the constitution. This was reportedly changed instead to “respect” the constitution.

“It was said that we have to defend the constitution, which we can’t accept, we couldn’t accept a military constitution, so we refused to abide by that point,” says Win Tin.

The key elements of concern were voiced by the party in their 2009 Shwegondaing proclamation states Win Tin, which called for the release of all political prisoners and rewriting the 2008 constitution.

He states that the government’s overtures have not been complete. “All these things are not fulfilled yet, especially this constitution.”

One such area of concern was recognition of the 1990 election. The speaker of the Pyidaungsu Hllutaw, the combined national parliaments, was said to have “recognised” that poll in an interview with a local journal on Wednesday, although the practical implications of this were unclear.

Aung San Suu Kyi meanwhile met Labour Minister Aung Kyi for the fourth time since March on Sunday. Whilst neither party was particularly forthcoming with details of the meeting, the state mouth piece, the New Light of Myanmar, published questions that Suu Kyi answered after the two met.

“NLD’s registration depends on the law. The registration is the issue we can tell only after the law is approved and enacted. When the law is approved, we will hold a meeting. According to the rules and regulations of our party, we can make decision after the meeting,” Suu Kyi was quoted as saying by the New Light of Myanmar.

She told journalists that the party would wait until the electoral law was enacted and also once they had time to review the law in full, as bills passed in parliament are often not made available to the public.

“We can tell when we see the law. We can’t tell now because we have not yet seen the law,” the Nobel Laureate added.

However there will likely be differences of opinion within her own party. Last year’s boycott induced a wholesale split in the party, with a group of prominent members leaving to form the National Democratic Force (NDF). This again split to form the New National Democratic Party, headed by Pyithu Hluttaw MP Thein Nyunt. Party member and youth wing co-ordinator, Yatha, told DVB that he believed the party would rejoin the NLD should it re-register.

 

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Comments


  1. Tony says:

    Unseemly haste NLD is trying to join the government is not quite good news for the majority of people especially the ones killed and raped daily in a large swath of te country.

    It is though notable that all three major exile news outlets and foreign governments are pushing for it.

    How the population of Burma could possibly gain from it is unclear.

  2. Tom J says:

    Having a world renowned and politically astute leader such as Daw Suu Kyi within the parliament, imperfect as it may be at the moment, could be a powerful trigger to speed up peaceful change, so long as the conditions are right for her election. Being bold means taking risks and this is never going to be revolutionary change, its going to be slow and line by line. We have to trust her judgement on when conditions are right for such a move.

  3. htun says:

    Burmese people are known to be ‘very unnited people,’ so I am not very surprised.
    The only thing I care so much is ‘ division in NLD and the pessimists at home and abroad can destroy the positive changes happening in Burma right now. This moment is very delicate.’

    I really hope that positive changes will continue to happen no matter how many obstacles are on the way. May Daw Suu live long and healthy life!

  4. Maung Kyaw Nu A Former Political Prisoner of Conscience Gneneration says:

    Is that not Than Shwe’s jungle law so called 2008 coonstitution??

  5. Myint says:

    I don’t see any change that really matter. Suu Kyi is still effectively ban taking presidency in the constitution

  6. Garrett says:

    The Burmese people didn’t get what they voted for in 1990, & were not given the opportunity to vote for the NLD in 2010, so what’s the point of Aung San Suu Kyi now allowing the NLD to become a token democratic presence in the parliament which will be constitutionally outnumbered by Than Shwe’s hand-picked puppets & military appointees?

    Now is the perfect time for Aung San Suu Kyi to proclaim to the Burmese people & the World that until the regime pulls its shock-troops out of the ethnic homelands, releases ALL political prisoners, & makes good on the putative reforms which have been the basis for so much recent international praise, the NLD will not dignify the regime with its participation.
    Better to challenge the wolves now than after another twenty years of political & economic repression, ethnic persecution & cultural genocide, ecological destruction, & the rape of Burma’s natural resources.
    At this critical point in Burmese history, it is time for Aung San Suu Kyi to promote the basics of justice, ethnic equality & national unity.

    “In an age when immense technological advances have created lethal weapons which could be, and are, used by the powerful and the unprincipled to dominate the weak and the helpless, there is a compelling need for a closer relationship between politics and ethics at both the national and international levels.

    The Universal Declaration of Human Rights of the United Nations proclaims that ‘every individual and every organ of society’ should strive to promote the basic rights and freedoms to which all human beings regardless of race, nationality or religion are entitled. But as long as there are governments whose authority is founded on coercion rather than on the mandate of the people, and interest groups which place short-term profits above long-term peace and prosperity, concerted international action to protect and promote human rights will remain at best a partially realized struggle.”
    (Aung San Suu Kyi)

  7. NL Kachin says:

    Is the Aung San Suu Kyi and NLD going to ignore the other ethnic because of the civil war is going on. If the NLD register to participate in the election that will gain to few groups not all the people of Burma. Is the NLD have got what they have demand in the past?? Not even free all the political prisoner, not so much change the military constitution and arm civil war is going on and on. Is the regime make NLD to separate again????

  8. Ohn says:

    It is unconscienable for anybody even to think about even a token support to a government, any government, which is actively, and in this instance increditably cruelly, killing and raping the innocent people regardless of who they are.

    To do so would require selling one’s own soul to the devil.

  9. Denys Goldthorpe says:

    Whatever happens now wether the NLD is registered or not there must be justice for every person who was a victim of this illegal regime. Every crime of rape murder as well as every other crime of human rights abuse ever carried out must be answered, Thitsaphout Than Shwe must stand trial and that includes everyone who ever took part in any of these crimes against the people of Burma, no one must ever escape justice, crimes against humanity can never be negotiated there must be justice for all.

  10. Nai says:

    If all political prisoners are released,and there is the chance to go into the election, why not NLD dare to do it? This is dilema situation, and needs to choose one way. So, make sure all political prisoners are released and if NLD can run again, just go for it rather than standing in one point. Political party needs to fight in the circle and of course there will a split that has happened since after independence. We need to construct trust within ourselves which had been badly destroyed by the British “divide and rule policy” making people not to trust other nationalities. My point is just go NLD if all political prisoners are released. Otherwise, you will not get that chance again. Also, prepare in the party for building infrastructure.





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