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    HomeAsiaMyanmar junta plans 'super-body' to tighten grip on military, new government

    Myanmar junta plans ‘super-body’ to tighten grip on military, new government

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    Feb 4 (Reuters) - Myanmar's junta will form ​a new entity to oversee both the military and civilian administration, a move experts say will allow paramount ruler Min Aung Hlaing to become president without loosening his grip on the powerful armed forces.

    Just days ⁠after the completion of a final phase of an election that will see a parliament convene next month and power transferred to a nominally civilian government, the junta announced its plans in state media late Tuesday to ‍create the five-member Union Consultative Council.

    Its mandate is exceptionally broad, granting it control over every critical component of national security and the ​legislative process, said Naing Min Khant, program associate at the Institute for Strategy and Policy - Myanmar think-tank.

    'SUPREME AUTHORITY'

    "The formation of the Union Consultative Council represents a significant institutional shift, likely to create a 'super-body' designed to hold supreme authority above ​the executive, legislative, and judicial branches," Naing Min Khant said.

    A spokesperson for the junta did not answer calls seeking comment on the council. 

    Min Aung Hlaing took control of Myanmar in a 2021 coup that ousted a civilian government led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi and triggered widespread protests that expanded into a nationwide civil war.

    More than 93,000 people have since been killed in violence in Myanmar, according to ‌the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.

    The 69-year-old Min Aung Hlaing has indicated he intends to hand over "state ‌responsibilities" to the next government. He is widely expected to become president. 

    The military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party swept the election, winning 81% of available ​upper and lower house seats in a contest criticised by the United Nations, some Western nations and rights groups as a one-sided exercise to keep the ruling generals in power through proxies.

    LACK OF ACCOUNTABILITY 

    State-run media did ‌not provide a reason for why the council was being formed. 

    According to two lawyers, it will potentially enable Min Aung Hlaing ⁠to become president while ensuring he retains full control over the military, which has ‌governed Myanmar for five of the past six decades. 

    It would ​also ensure he had control over the civilian-led administration and legislative matters, they said. 

    "I believe that this newly appointed Union Consultative Council will oversee the new (military) Commander-in-Chief on one hand, and the government on the other," said Kyee ⁠Myint, adding that the body would ⁠prevent any successor to Min Aung Hlaing as military chief from holding too much power.

    But there appears to be no ​oversight for the new council, according to Naing Min Khant.

    "A defining feature of this arrangement is its total lack of accountability," he said.

    (Reporting by Reuters Staff; ‌Writing by Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing by Martin Petty)

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