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Myanmar voters 'cannot accept' junta's charter: Suu Kyi's party
Thu, Feb 28, 2008
AFP

YANGON, MYANMAR - THE party of Myanmar's detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi said on Thursday that the junta's proposed constitution 'cannot be accepted by the people' when it goes to a referendum in May.

In its strongest statement yet on the referendum, the National League for Democracy (NLD) said the regime had drafted the constitution without consulting key representatives of the people.

'The one-sided text of the authorities can not only harm the national reconciliation process but also cannot be accepted by the people,' the party said in a written statement.

The junta says public approval of the constitution will clear the way for multiparty elections in 2010.

If held, the polls would be the first since Aung San Suu Kyi led the NLD to a landslide victory in the 1990 elections.

The junta ignored the result and instead has kept the Nobel peace prize winner under house arrest for 12 of the last 18 years.

The NLD said most winners of the 1990 parliamentary elections had not participated in the drafting of the constitution.

The party also pointed to a conflict of interest by the regime for including many of the constitutional drafters on the new commission set up this week to oversee the referendum.

Supreme Court chief justice Aung Toe headed the panel that drafted the charter, and also heads the commission charged with organising the vote to approve it, the party said.

'That was against the advice and demands of international organisations, including the United Nations. All responsible persons should be included in the process of drafting the state constitution and the transformation of the nation,' the NLD said.

The junta still has not set an exact date for the referendum or released the final text of the document.

Foreign Minister Nyan Win told a regional gathering in Singapore last week that the constitution would bar Aung San Suu Kyi from running because she had been married to a foreigner, late British academic Michael Aris.

A law enacted on Tuesday threatens three years in prison for anyone who gives speeches or distributes leaflets about the referendum.

The United States has condemned the proposed charter and urged the regime to start from scratch on a new one. It has also tightened sanctions on the leadership and key business leaders. -- AFP

 

 
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