Retired Myanmar general set for powerful role in new Parliament, sources say

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FILE PHOTO: Myanmar's Minister of Immigration and Population Khin Yi talks during an Reuters interview at his office in Naypyitaw June 10, 2013. REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun/File Photo

Union Solidarity and Development Party's chairman Khin Yi is tipped to take the pivotal post of Lower House Speaker, sources say.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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A retired general from an

army-backed party that swept Myanmar’s election

is set to take the powerful role of speaker of Parliament, party sources said, which could help the military cement control of government after a return to democratic rule.

A junta that has run Myanmar since a 2021 coup will formally cede power after a new Parliament meets in March, with the top generals expected to loom large in politics after a resounding election win by the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which the military formed in 2010.

Three USDP sources told Reuters the party’s chairman, Mr Khin Yi, a retired brigadier-general and former police chief, is tipped to take the pivotal post of Lower House Speaker.

In that role, he would oversee the election of a new president, the passage of laws and the approval of budgets and key state appointments.

The USDP did not respond to requests for comment on Mr Khin Yi’s future role.

Military to dominate civilian politics

One of the sources, who all spoke on condition of anonymity as the issue is a sensitive one, said retired generals with close ties to junta chief Min Aung Hlaing were likely to become first and second vice-presidents.

“Since there are high-ranking former military officers within the party, understanding their roles, the highest possible position for him would likely be the Speaker of the Lower House,” the source said, speaking of Mr Khin Yi.

Myanmar’s unique power-sharing system gives control of 25 per cent of legislative seats to the military that has ruled the country for five of the past six decades, and also of the Ministries of Defence, Border Affairs and Interior.

With low voter turnout, a raging civil war and no viable opposition, the USDP won 81 per cent of available seats in the Upper and Lower Houses during the recent election, effectively putting the legislature under the military’s control.

In addition, a new five-member panel, the Union Consultative Council, will be set up to oversee both military and civilian administration.

Experts say such a move will allow junta chief Min Aung Hlaing to become president without loosening his grip on the armed forces.

Power and influence

The post of speaker, held previously by political heavyweights, offers greater clout than the prestigious but largely ceremonial role of vice president, said independent political analyst Htin Kyaw Aye.

“This is a position with a high capacity for influence and action,” he said. “If one cannot be president, the position of speaker of the Hluttaw (Parliament) is the one that allows for the greatest exercise of power.”

Another incoming USDP lawmaker said information about who would take the key posts in Myanmar was closely guarded and known among only the core leadership.

Two other members present at a recent USDP meeting said Mr Khin Yi, a former immigration minister, had been asked informally if he would be vice-president and responded by saying he would take a key parliamentary role.

“He said, ‘What is certain is that I think I will be leading in the legislative sectors of one of the Houses of Parliament’,” one of the sources quoted Mr Khin Yi as saying at the meeting. REUTERS

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