In Myanmar Presidential vote to start on March 17 as transition talks drag on
"The article can't be suspended. It's against the constitution. It has already been discussed in the parliament so it should not be proposed and discussed again."
Myanmar's
parliament will begin its election of the new president on March 17,
cutting very close to an April 1 deadline, suggesting talks between Aung San Suu Kyi's victorious party and the military are likely to take longer than planned.
But a top military lawmaker on Monday denied that Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy
(NLD) and the armed forces were discussing provisions to change the
constitution and allow the democracy champion to become the country's
new president.
Senior NLD members had
told the media they would hold presidential elections in February, but
the parliament on Monday decided the process would start two weeks
before the new government is scheduled to begin its term, on April 1.
"I hereby announce that the meetings of the three presidential electoral colleges will be held effective March 17," joint chamber speaker Mahn Win Khaing Than said in parliament.
The
NLD swept the historic Nov. 8 election, securing some 80 percent of
elected seats in parliament, or enough to push through its president.
That
kicked off a lengthy transition process during which the military and
the NLD have been locked in negotiations, most probably over the shape
of the new government and transfer of power, but details of the talks
have been murky.
"There is no discussing between the military and NLD about Article 59 (f)," Brigadier General Tin San Naing, the spokesman of the military caucus in parliament, told Reuters on Monday.
The
article, which bars anyone with foreign children and spouses from
becoming president, is seen as being aimed at Suu Kyi, whose children
are British.
It could only be amended with the army's approval, Tin San Naing added.
"The
article can't be suspended. It's against the constitution. It has
already been discussed in the parliament so it should not be proposed
and discussed again."
The article had been "put in the constitution intentionally, to protect our people from foreign invasion," he added.
Under
the junta-drafted constitution, parliament chooses the president. Each
of the two chambers nominates its vice-presidential candidate, while the
military MPs, who are guaranteed a quarter of the seats, nominate the
third.
Once the candidates are in place, a
joint-chamber session picks the president for a five-year term. The two
losing candidates become vice-presidents.
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