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World / Asia

Perils on the path to power for Myanmar's Suu Kyi

Published: 15 Nov 2015 - 08:53 am | Last Updated: 08 Nov 2021 - 12:16 am
Peninsula

 

Yangon: Wielding an overwhelming mandate from Myanmar's voters, Aung San Suu Kyi has power in her sights after a quarter century of democratic struggle against the army, but analysts say building bridges with former military foes is vital to her success.

A resounding victory for Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy (NLD) sets the stage for a radical rebalancing of power in Myanmar, dominated for generations by repressive and economically-ruinous military rule.

In a sign of the deep craving for change in the nation, voters handed the party 80 percent of elected seats in the national legislature. 

The result sends a "strong signal to the military that the writing is on the wall and your domination is coming to an end", said political analyst Khin Zaw Win.

Suu Kyi was locked up for 15 years by paranoid generals fearful of the democracy campaigner's enormous popularity.

But to rule she will have to foster a relationship with the country's military elites, who continue to hold significant political and economic power despite reforms under a quasi-civilian regime that replaced junta rule in 2011.

Observers predict tremulous times ahead for the Nobel laureate, with some four months before an NLD led government can take the reins under Myanmar's complex political system.

Burned into public memory is the bitter disappointment of 1990 elections, which were won overwhelmingly by the NLD only to be ignored by the military, who clung to power for another two decades. 

So far the signs are positive, according to Khin Zaw Win who said the NLD had a "once in a century" chance to steer Myanmar towards a brighter future.

AFP