Suu Kyi makes debut in Myanmar parliament

Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi takes seat as elected politician for first time in military dominated legislature.

suu kyi parliament seat
Myanmar's opposition leader has her first taste of public office [Reuters]

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi made her historic parliamentary debut, marking a new phase in her near quarter century struggle to bring democracy to her homeland.

Suu Kyi, whose campaigning saw her locked up for years by the former junta and earned her a Nobel Peace Prize, appeared calm on Monday as she arrived to take her seat as an elected politician for the first time in the capital Naypyidaw.

“I will try my best for the country,” she said.

The democracy champion’s first taste of public office comes at an uncertain time for Myanmar, after recent communal  violence and a series of student arrests cast a shadow over promising changes in the former pariah state.

It also comes amid expectations that several senior hardliners are to be replaced by reformists in an imminent cabinet reshuffle that would mark the first major change of personnel in the top echelons of government since it replaced junta rule last year.

Suu Kyi will join fellow members of her National League for Democracy (NLD), as both the party and its iconic leader transform from dissident outsiders to mainstream political players in the wake of landmark April by-elections.

‘Legislative concert’

The 67-year-old, one of the NLD’s 37 lower house members of parliament, postponed her debut in the fledgling legislature last week to recover from a gruelling European tour and visit her constituency.

Fellow Lower house NLD MP May Win Myint said she was “excited” about Suu Kyi’s arrival.

“We are ready to support her,” Win Myint said.

Parliament is still dominated by the military and its political allies, but even military men appeared pleased to see the veteran activist, despite NLD plans to ease them out of the legislature by scrapping a constitutional provision granting them a quarter of seats.

“It’s good that she arrived today, we all welcome her,” said brigadier general Wai Lin.

MPs have a number of pressing issues on the table for discussion during the current session, which began last Wednesday.

Communal violence in June between ethnic Buddhist Rakhine and Muslim Rohingya, which left dozens dead and tens of thousands homeless, is on the agenda, with an ongoing state of emergency requiring parliamentary approval.

A new foreign investment law aimed at resuscitating the country’s moribund economy is also in the pipeline.

Suu Kyi on Tuesday pledged her party will join “the legislative concert” and push for greater transparency once inside parliament.

Source: News Agencies