Myanmar’s Government Appoints Military to the Election Commission
January 28, 2014
By Priscilla Clapp & Aung Din
http://cogitasia.com/myanmars-government-appoints-military-to-the-election-commission/
http://cogitasia.com/myanmars-government-appoints-military-to-the-election-commission/
The December 27 Myanmar State
Gazette announced that 58 military officers with the rank of major and 3
with the rank of captain have been appointed to the Union Election Commission
(UEC). According to the announcement, these active military officials were
transferred from the Office of the Commander-in-Chief (Army) to the UEC to fill
its organizational structure. The majors are to serve as assistant directors
and the captains as administrative officers in the various commission offices,
possibly in districts and townships. These appointments have been in effect
since December 2, but the official announcement was not made until more than
three weeks later.
What, if any, impact the appointment
of military officers to the commission staff may have on the election process
is impossible to predict at this stage, but it appears to be the first time
under Myanmar’s 2008 constitution that active duty military personnel have been
appointed to help conduct elections. If this trend continues unopposed, many
more military officers may be transferred to the UEC before 2015. This will be
unacceptable, because it will not bode well for free and fair elections.
The UEC is one of the highest level
authoritative bodies in Myanmar, with vast power conferred by the 2008
constitution “to monitor and decide the fate of political parties, arrange or
postpone or cancel election schedules, hold elections, judge election-related
cases, and investigate members of parliament if just one percent of their constituents
complain and fire them if allegations are found true.”
The president nominates the chairman and members of the UEC, but the parliament has no right to reject the nominees as long as they meet the standard qualifications. The constitution also makes the UEC more powerful by stating in Article 402 that, “The resolution and functions made by the Union Election Commission on the following matters shall be final and conclusive: (a) election functions; (b) appeals and revisions relating to the resolutions and orders of the election tribunals; (c) matters taken under the law relating to political party.”
This powerful body is being led by Tin Aye, a former lieutenant general in the previous military regime, who remains loyal to President Thein Sein. In June 2013 several members of parliament called for the UEC to hold by-elections to fill vacancies: 16 in the lower house, 4 in the upper house, and 16 in state and regional parliaments. Tin Aye simply replied that as the UEC is busy with preparations for the 2015 elections, there is no plan to conduct by-elections for the time being.
His response effectively deprived 2
million people of representation in the parliament at a time when momentous
decisions will be made, and froze the elected membership in the parliament at
less than the intended 75 percent. In any case, his decision as the chairman of
the UEC is final.
Filling these vacant seats as soon
as possible is critical, as the parliament is preparing to discuss amending the
constitution in the current and coming sessions in 2014. The military, which
holds 25 percent of the seats in parliament, already has veto power because
amendments to the constitution can be made only with the approval of more than
75 percent of the parliament. Occupying less than their intended 75 percent of
the legislature only further weakens the position of the elected
representatives. Their vote count is now just 72 percent.
Tin Aye is being criticized by some
in the media not just for refusing to hold the by-elections, but also for
accompanying President Thein Sein on his visits to several parts of the
country. He is supposed to be independent and should not associate with any
political party members or office holders. Seeing him at the side of Thein Sein
on presidential trips and at the conference of the ruling Union Solidarity and
Development Party (USDP) in 2013 raised many politicians’ eyebrows. The recent
appointment of 61 army officers to senior positions in the UEC is sure to
discomfort many more.
Placing military officers in high
level positions in the civil service is a decades-old practice of Myanmar’s
successive military regimes, which have all aimed to award their soldiers and
keep civilian staff under control. Such practices are a relic of the past and
should be stopped if the country is truly on the path to democracy. The UEC is
supposed to be an independent commission, free of influence by the ruling party
and the military. The conduct of the elections in 2015 will be questionable if
the chairman of the UEC cannot prove that he does not favor the ruling party,
that he is not an ally of the current president, and that he is not associated
with the military.
Meanwhile the clock is rapidly
ticking down on the time left for amending the constitution before the 2015
elections.
Ms. Priscilla Clapp is the former
chief of mission of the U.S. Embassy in Myanmar and is currently working on
Myanmar with a number of institutions. Mr. Aung Din is a democracy and human
rights activist and former political prisoner in Myanmar.
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