Myanmar Junta Chief Nominated for Presidential Vote as Transition Looms

March 30 (Reuters) – Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing was ⁠nominated ⁠by a lawmaker on Monday ⁠for a parliamentary vote that will select the new president of the war-torn ​Southeast Asian nation, as the powerful general seeks a political role.

Min Aung Hlaing, who has led Myanmar’s military ‌since 2011, was one of two ‌people named as vice-presidential candidates by lawmakers from the country’s newly convened lower house of parliament.

The ⁠country’s upper ⁠house will also nominate a vice-presidential candidate, with both houses to select ​a president from the three in a later vote. A date for that vote has not been announced.

“Senior General Min Aung Hlaing is proposed as a vice presidential candidate,” Kyaw Kway Htay, a lawmaker from a military-aligned ​party, said on the floor of the lower house of parliament, according to a live broadcast ⁠of ⁠proceedings on state media.

The move ⁠follows a controversial ​election held amid raging conflict in December and January, won by the military-backed Union Solidarity and ​Development Party but widely ⁠derided as a sham by the United Nations and many Western countries.

Myanmar has been gripped by violence since a 2021 coup, in which the military, also known as the Tatmadaw, unseated the democratically elected government of Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi.

Under the country’s military-drafted 2008 Constitution, analysts say ⁠that presidential candidates cannot be active-duty military personnel or civil servants at the time ⁠of their nomination.

In a rare public signalling of transition by the military that has dominated Myanmar for decades, Min Aung Hlaing’s deputy said last week that the secretive institution’s leadership was set for a reshuffle.

“This has been Min Aung Hlaing’s goal all along,” said independent analyst Htin Kyaw Aye, pointing to the general’s potential presidential role.

“It’s just a shift from ruling as a military leader to ruling as president.”

Born to a family from Myanmar’s south, Min Aung Hlaing studied law before entering the military and rising steadily through the ⁠ranks, culminating in his promotion to military chief in 2011.

A rigid military leader and considered a ruthless operator, Min Aung Hlaing has also relied on a finely tuned ability to manage the country’s elites, using tactics that include handing important positions to loyalists and punishing ​political rivals, Reuters has reported.

(Reporting by Reuters staff; Writing by Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing ​by John Mair, David Stanway and Kate Mayberry)

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