Myanmar's new era.
- hanno
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Re: Myanmar's new era.
I see that point but hopes were (unrealistically?) high and some Burmese feel she should tackle problems at home first before going on extended tripscptrelentless wrote:I think if I'd been under house arrest for 20-odd years I might spend a little time out of the country
- phuketrichard
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Re: Myanmar's new era.
i was just back there last month - Mandalay, Inle lake, Mrauk U, Yangon, my views are things are getting better. Internet is everywhere, economy is better,Foreign investment is up, Banking has been opened up, Roads, schools, hospitals are being built, People "seem" to be better off YET there is an undercurrent when u talk with the locals, Not enough is being done. BUT they also realize it takes time to achieve changes.
Aung San is NOT her father and the military is still firmly in control. Regardless,the changes over the past few years is immense and i still believe ,given time,they will get on the right path.
Aung San is NOT her father and the military is still firmly in control. Regardless,the changes over the past few years is immense and i still believe ,given time,they will get on the right path.
As the first year of its tenure has come to a close, many continue to question whether Burma’s elected civilian-led government has managed to accomplish its aims, or if in this regard, it has failed.
One certain thing we have witnessed is that the government led by State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi is still struggling to bring about peace, national reconciliation and create a democratic federal Union, as well as increase economic growth and development in the country, which has been left in disarray after more than 50 years of military dictatorship.
.Burma is still suffering from many of the problems inherited from the past. A 70-year civil war continues. The military—the country’s most powerful institution—still calls the shots on conflict with ethnic armed groups.
In a recent interview with the BBC, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi said: “They [the military] are free to go in and fight. And of course that is in the Constitution. Military matters are to be left to the army. That’s why we are trying to change the Constitution. Amending the Constitution is one of our aims.”
One of the biggest challenges for the NLD government is still the 2008 charter drafted by the previous military regime, which guarantees the political power of the military in the government with three key ministerial positions—defense, home and border affairs—and 25 percent of all legislative seats reserved for military appointees
https://www.irrawaddy.com/opinion/the-p ... -rule.htmlThe State Counselor admitted in her speech that some of her ministers have been inactive and some are not in the right positions. Regarding these cases, the government will make necessary changes, she added.
As she said, one year is not a long period of time for a government to do its work. But it is now time for the NLD administration to fix their political missteps, unpopular policies and controversial leadership style. It is time for a reshuffle of the cabinet. The State Counselor must axe incapable ministers and high-ranking officials and replace them with those who can make her government more competent.
In a nation run by swine, all pigs are upward-mobile and the rest of us are fucked until we can put our acts together: not necessarily to win, but mainly to keep from losing completely. HST
- hanno
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Re: Myanmar's new era.
I was there last month and agree with a lot of things but tell that to the Rohingya..... And her interview with the BBC was a joke.
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