'Myanmar for 'discipline-flourishing democracy' Thursday, January 04, 2007 06:12 [IST]
Yangon: Myanmar's
ruling junta is seeking to create a 'discipline-flourishing democracy, the
military announced Thursday at a ceremony commemorating the national
Independence Day.
"We are working for the emergence of
discipline-flourishing democracy through National Convention process,"
announced Myanmar's junta chief Senior General Than Shwe in a written message
to the 59th Independence Day celebration held for the first time in Nay Phi
Taw, the country's new capital situated about 300 km north of Yangon.
Nay Phi Taw Commander Brigadier-General Wai Lwin read out
Than Shwe's message during the flag hoisting ceremony at the capital's City Hall Square.
Than Shwe, chairman of the State Peace and Development
Council (SPDC) as Myanmar's ruling junta styles itself - since 1992, was
absent from the ceremony, observers said.
The 73-year-old general is reportedly receiving medical
treatment in Singapore
for an unspecified illness.
Myanmar,
which won its independence from its former colonial master Britain in
1948, has been under near continual military rule since 1962.
Former strongman General Ne Win overthrew the
post-independence elected government of prime minister U Nu in 1962 and
remained in power until 1988, when nationwide anti-military demonstrations
forced his resignation from all political posts.
After a brief period of semi-civilian rule in 1988, a new
junta seized power and launched a bloody crackdown on demonstrators that left
an estimated 3,000 people dead.
Despite a general election in 1990 that was won by the
opposition National League for Democracy (NLD), led by Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar
has remained under military rule since the putsch of 1988.
The SPDC claims it will turn over political power to an
elected government after the completion of the National Convention process,
which is drafting a new constitution.
The convention process has been broadly criticised as a
'sham', designed to perpetuate military rule in Myanmar, or what the junta has now
termed "discipline-flourishing democracy".
"It is high time to discard the sham National
Convention and all its effluent waste which the military group is trying to use
to justify their wrongs and prolong their evil misrule," said the National
Council of the Union of Burma (NCUB), an umbrella group for various
pro-democracy and ethnic minority groups in Myanmar. |