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Myanmar’s Min Aung Hlaing appoints new cabinet, military still dominates

  • Apr 9
  • 2 min read

Myanmar’s parliament approved a list of 30 ministers to serve in the cabinet of regime leader Min Aung Hlaing on Thursday following his appointment as president last week, with ​the military still holding a dominant role.


The move follows a widely disputed victory ‌by the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) in an election that was supposed to mark Myanmar’s transition to civilian rule, but was dismissed as a sham by the United Nations and many Western countries.


The ​cabinet list approved on Thursday signals a business as usual approach by ​Min Aung Hlaing, with most of his appointees consisting of retired military ⁠officers and holdovers from the previous administration.


Regime Defence Minister Maung Maung Aye has retired, ​to be replaced by Tun Aung, former air commander-in-chief. Regime Minister of Broder Affairs Yar Pyae ​has also stepped down to be replaced by Hpone Myat, formerly the home affairs minister.


Former ambassador to China Tin Maung Swe will take up the role of ​foreign affairs minister. He has also served previously as a military attache in Britain.


A ​number of former defence ministers who have served the regime since it took power in a ‌2021 military coup ⁠were also reappointed to the new cabinet, including retired generals Mya Tun Oo and Tin Aung San.


The regime leader, voted president by a pro-military parliament on April 3, also nominated former officials to head another 14 ministries, extending the dominance of ex-military generals and former police chiefs across the legislative, executive and ​judicial branches.


Analysts said that ​the appointments suggest ⁠that significant structural change is unlikely, with many of the old guard changing uniforms but retaining their previous influence.


“Min Aung Hlaing has ​established a political system where military officers wear traditional civilian attire ​to govern ⁠in a civilian capacity, while he continues to maintain centralised control,” said independent analyst Aung Kyaw Soe.


He added that under such a system, there is no reason to expect genuine ⁠progress ​in Myanmar.


Myanmar has been gripped by violence since the ​2021 coup, when the military unseated a democratically elected government led by ​Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi.


REUTERS


 
 
 

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