Suu Kyi predicts charter change.
tharkyawgyi@gmail.com
YANGON - Amendments to Myanmar's military-drafted 2008
constitution are likely to be pushed through before the 2015 general election,
democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi said on Friday.
"We
will try to amend the constitution before 2015 and we hope we can do it,"
Suu Kyi told a news conference.
The
Nobel Peace Prize laureate, who spent 15 years under house arrest between 1989
to 2010, became a member of parliament after she and her National League for
Democracy (NLD) party won 43 out of 45 contested seats in a by-election in
April, 2012.
Suu
Kyi has cultivated close working relationships with President Thein Sein and
Lower House speaker Shwe Mann, deemed the two most powerful figures in
Myanmar's still pro-military regime.
Thein
Sein heads the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which is packed
with ex-military men and leads the government after winning the November 2010.
"I
believe the ruling party, USDP, also wants to amend the constitution because
the important issues to review the charter were submitted by senior members of
USDP and were approved without any disagreement," Suu Kyi said.
The
most controversial clause in the 2008 constitution gives the military
establishment the right to appoint 25% of the seats in parliament, enough to
veto any laws deemed detrimental to the military's long-established control
over the country. Myanmar was ruled by a military dictatorships between 1962 to
2010.
Suu
Kyi acknowledged that amending the constitution would be "difficult".
Myanmar's next general election is scheduled for 2015.
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