Myanmar’s Key Parties Reject Regime’s Election Body Invites to Meet
The military council meeting on Feb. 16 in Naypyitaw. / seniorgeneralminaunghlaing.com
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By The Irrawaddy 24 February 2021
Yangon The new Union Election Commission (UEC) formed by Myanmar’s military regime has invited political parties to a meeting on Friday.
The invitation letter did not give an agenda and only asked the parties to say if they will attend.
The Shan Nationalities League for Democracy (SNLD) told The Irrawaddy that the central executive committee decided not to attend the meeting.
The SNLD won 15 seats in the Union Parliament and 27 Shan State parliamentary seats in the November general election.
Myanmar Generals’ Path to ‘Eternal Peace’
The peace process was already at a crossroads before the coup. With the Tatmadaw now in charge, what comes next?
By
February 08, 2021
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When the National League for Democracy closed its first term in government last year, peacebuilding in Myanmar was already at a crossroads.
Now, following the military coup, observers are asking what approach the generals might take to secure the “eternal peace” prescribed in the declaration justifying the emergency state.
Armed conflicts in the ethnic areas are Myanmar’s seemingly never ending drama. They were even cited as the cause of the major political crises of the 20th century, followed by power grabs by other men in uniform. This time, however, the military is citing election irregularities and the smuggled walkie-talkie of NLD leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
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Aung San Suu Kyi is a victim of a coup. But is she still a hero of democracy?
Ishaan Tharoor, The Washington Post
Feb. 2, 2021
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Myanmar s fragile, flawed democracy has collapsed. In the early hours Monday, the country s military initiated a coup, arresting civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other politicians, including ministers from her National League for Democracy (NLD) party. A state of emergency was declared for a year. Soldiers blocked roads and fanned out across the capital Naypyidaw and Yangon, the country s largest city.
The military carried out the predawn raid just hours before Myanmar s new parliament, dominated by Suu Kyi s NLD, was scheduled to sit. The generals and their proxy political party, which suffered badly in November elections, claimed voter irregularities, though Myanmar s electoral commission last week rejected allegations that fraud played a significant role in the NLD s landslide win. (My