Scuffles at protest over Myanmar charter veto
YANGON: Angry crowds scuffled with police in downtown Yangon on Tuesday in a protest against the Myanmar army’s veto on constitutional change, blamed for the defeat last week of a charter reform bill backed by Aung San Suu Kyi.A few hundred passers-by joined a handful of student demonstrators calling for
By our correspondents
July 01, 2015
YANGON: Angry crowds scuffled with police in downtown Yangon on Tuesday in a protest against the Myanmar army’s veto on constitutional change, blamed for the defeat last week of a charter reform bill backed by Aung San Suu Kyi.
A few hundred passers-by joined a handful of student demonstrators calling for the removal of the unelected soldiers who make up a quarter of parliamentary seats, as they faced off against a wall of riot police, many carrying batons and shields.
Myanmar’s parliament on Thursday voted down a bill to end the military’s effective veto on changing the country’s junta-era charter, which bars opposition leader Suu Kyi from becoming president.
The vote was seen as the last chance to try to amend the constitution ahead of a landmark election in October or November.
“Twenty five percent in parliament — Get out! Get out!” the protesters shouted, referencing the controversial bloc of seats reserved for the military, “we want to change the constitution!”
The polls are set to be the first national elections to include Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy for a quarter of a century and the party is expected to hoover up seats, if the vote is free and fair.
But Suu Kyi is barred from becoming president because of a provision excluding those with foreign children from the top office. Her sons are British.
She urged people not to “lose hope” after last week’s parliament vote, which saw 60 percent of MPs support a tweak that would have loosened the army’s stranglehold on charter change.
A few hundred passers-by joined a handful of student demonstrators calling for the removal of the unelected soldiers who make up a quarter of parliamentary seats, as they faced off against a wall of riot police, many carrying batons and shields.
Myanmar’s parliament on Thursday voted down a bill to end the military’s effective veto on changing the country’s junta-era charter, which bars opposition leader Suu Kyi from becoming president.
The vote was seen as the last chance to try to amend the constitution ahead of a landmark election in October or November.
“Twenty five percent in parliament — Get out! Get out!” the protesters shouted, referencing the controversial bloc of seats reserved for the military, “we want to change the constitution!”
The polls are set to be the first national elections to include Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy for a quarter of a century and the party is expected to hoover up seats, if the vote is free and fair.
But Suu Kyi is barred from becoming president because of a provision excluding those with foreign children from the top office. Her sons are British.
She urged people not to “lose hope” after last week’s parliament vote, which saw 60 percent of MPs support a tweak that would have loosened the army’s stranglehold on charter change.
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