The man who has led the military junta in Myanmar for 15 years was nominated by the lower house of parliament for the presidency on Monday after a general election that paved the way to legitimise military rule.
Min Aung Hlaing was one of two people named as vice-presidential candidates by lawmakers.
The nomination marks the initial step in the presidential race, with the union parliament set to choose the head of state from three vice-presidential candidates, as required under the constitution. Min Aung Hlaing, who has been sanctioned by several Western nations, including the US, is almost certain to become president, having been nominated alongside two loyalists who are not seen as serious contenders.
The war-torn southeast Asian nation opened its first parliamentary session in more than five years this month following an election that did not include major opposition parties, ensuring that the ruling military retains a firm grasp on power.
Myanmar has been gripped by violence since a 2021 coup in which the military wrested power from the democratically elected government of the Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. The country has since been embroiled in a civil war which has killed thousands of people and displaced millions. The conflict intensified in 2023 after the Three Brotherhood Alliance launched offensives against the army.
“Senior General Min Aung Hlaing is proposed as a vice-presidential candidate,” Kyaw Kway Htay, a representative of a military-aligned party, said on the floor of the lower house of parliament, according to state media.
The move follows a controversial election held in December and January, won by the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party but widely derided as a sham by the United Nations and many Western countries. The regime has rejected the criticism.
The military and its allies hold nearly 90 per cent of the seats in the two-chamber parliament.
Analysts say that, under Myanmar’s constitution, drafted by the military in 2008, presidential candidates cannot be active-duty military personnel or civil servants at the time of their nomination.
In a rare public signalling of transition by the military that has dominated Myanmar for decades, Mr Min’s deputy said last week that the secretive institution’s leadership was set for a reshuffle. “This has been Min Aung Hlaing’s goal all along,” said independent analyst Htin Kyaw Aye, pointing to the general’s potential presidential role. “It’s just a shift from ruling as a military leader to ruling as president.”
Ye Win Oo, a Min loyalist, has been appointed commander-in-chief of defence services, according to military-owned Myawaddy TV.
Born to a family from Myanmar's south, Min Aung Hlaing studied law before entering the military and rising steadily through the ranks, culminating in his promotion to military chief in 2011. A rigid military leader and considered a ruthless operator, he has also relied on a finely tuned ability to manage the country’s elites, using tactics that include handing important positions to loyalists and punishing political rivals.
He was seen as coveting the presidency, driven in part by the military party’s poor 2020 election showing to back the coup that ousted Ms Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s 80-year-old former leader, who is serving a 27-year prison term on charges widely viewed as spurious and politically motivated. Her party won landslide victories in the 2015 and 2020 elections, but was forced to dissolve in 2023 after refusing to register under new military rules.
Six Ukrainians arrested in India for training Myanmar groups in drone warfare
Ukraine asks India to release citizens over alleged drone activity
Why Pakistan’s ambitious bid to mediate in the US-Iran war could ‘backfire’
Floods and landslides triggered by heavy rains kill 22 people in Afghanistan
IMF reaches staff-level agreement to unlock $1.2bn for Pakistan
Nepal arrests former prime minister Oli over deadly Gen Z protest crackdown