Beyond the National Convention
Loading...
Date
Authors
South, Ashley
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Irrawaddy Publishing Group
Abstract
Burma’s ceasefire groups look ahead.
It is never wise to try and second-guess the turn of events in Burma, but it’s
safe to say that the current constitution-drafting National Convention is widely
perceived as illegitimate—both inside Burma and abroad. This perception won’t
change unless the process is broadened to include meaningful participation on
the part of the National League for Democracy, or NLD, and the United
Nationalities Alliance, or UNA, a coalition of ethnic nationality parties
elected in 1990, which has always worked closely with the NLD.
Despite the legitimacy deficit of the constitution-drafting exercise, the
convention has emerged as the most important political arena since the 1990
election—and perhaps even since the military takeover of 1962. For Burma’s
ethnic nationalist communities in particular, it represents a milestone in
efforts to have their concerns registered on the national political stage.
Description
Citation
'The Irrawaddy' September 2004
Collections
Source
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
DOI
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description
Author/s version
Published version