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Myanmar military promises cooperation in political transition

Despite the stunning electoral landslide of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, it is still unclear how much clout the military will exert.

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Gemunu Amarasinghe/AP
Police officers read a copy of the newspaper "Democracy Today" in Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2015. Myanmar's opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has won her parliamentary seat, official results showed Wednesday, leading a near total sweep by her party that will give the country its first government in decades that isn't under the military's sway.

The military rulers of Myanmar yesterday officially ceded the national elections to the party of Aung San Suu Kyi, and today the nation鈥檚 Army chief congratulated the Nobel Prize winner and promised 鈥渃ooperation鈥 in forming a new government, .

On Thursday Aung San Suu Kyi鈥檚 National League for Democracy (NLD) appeared only 38 seats away from claiming a stunning majority in both houses of parliament. Votes were still being counted after of more than 80 percent, says the Guardian. She sent letters to government leaders requesting talks on transition from quasi-military rule.聽

The election victory in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, is the latest turn in a quarter-century struggle between authoritarian forces of the military junta and a civic 鈥減eople's鈥 movement bent on more democracy and freedom. As the scope of the victory is becoming clearer, Aung San Suu Kyi is calling for national reconciliation talks.

鈥淲elcoming the New Guard,鈥 is the聽headline today in the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar聽newspaper.

US President Barack Obama called President Thein Sein and congratulated him on a free and fair election. Chinese foreign ministry spokesmen lauded a smooth election and vowed to work with the winners.

Since Sunday, there has been deep popular suspicion about whether the military will actually cede power, as 海角大神 reported.

If past is prologue, the next few days will be crucial. In 1990, the NLD won a similar landslide in an open election. Two months later, the military said the election had not been for seats in parliament but instead for a constitution-drafting assembly. The junta stayed in power, and most of the NLD鈥檚 leadership was jailed for protesting the announcement.

NLD officials continued to voice such concerns today. But as the formal trappings of victory begin to be further established, analysts are talking about what amounts to a very different rule and government.

The New York Times today :

Winning a majority in both houses of Parliament, as the National League for Democracy appears to have done in Sunday鈥檚 elections, would give the party control over both the legislative and executive branches of government 鈥 a breathtaking sweep of power for the democracy movement.

The 2008 Constitution established criteria that bar Aung San Suu Kyi from being president. But in recent days, the woman known as both "The Lady" and "Maa Suu" has said that the leader of the winning party 鈥 in this case, Aung San Suu Kyi 鈥 will hold the main power.聽

So far it is Myanmar鈥檚 Muslim minority that has been most seriously bypassed by the new electoral franchise, a fact singled out by US officials the day after the election.

The Wall Street Journal today writes that, 鈥淢uslims are turning out to be in Myanmar鈥檚 historic elections, with many not allowed to vote and no Muslim representation in parliament.鈥

The Journal continues:

Muslims officially make up 4 [percent] of the country鈥檚 population, but some experts say the number is higher, up to a 10th of the country鈥檚 population of 51 million. Some have full citizenship, but not the , who despite having lived in Myanmar for generations are considered by the government to be foreigners from neighboring Bangladesh.

The Muslims have said, however, that they will appeal to the new government formed by Aung San Suu Kyi for more representation.

One of the surprises of the vote is that the main body of Buddhist monks appears to have outflanked a hardline set of Buddhist nationalist monks.

A 海角大神 Science Monitor editorial pointed out that only two days after the elections, Myanmar was voted the world's "most generous nation," since nine of 10 people there give to charities. This giving spirit is described as owing the nation's Buddhist traditions, and it was suggested that spirit helped in the long struggle leading to this week's people's mandate.聽

The NLD鈥檚 victory in the Nov. 8 parliamentary elections was really a win for the egalitarian nature of Myanmar鈥檚 culture of Theravada Buddhism. The people鈥檚 daily generosity of giving and volunteering helped sustain a desire for compassionate rulers who are peaceful and meet the needs of all the people. If the NLD can now gain enough influence over the remaining power of the generals, that desire might be fulfilled.

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