Myanmar 2008 Constitution ๐ฅ
On May 10, 2008, the junta announced a national referendum to approve the constitution. But just days before, Cyclone Nargis had torn through the Irrawaddy Delta, killing over 138,000 people. While the world watched in horror, the military regime pressed on. In devastated villages, where survivors clung to uprooted trees, soldiers went door to door demanding "yes" votes. In Yangon, a schoolteacher named Daw Khin Myint whispered to her neighbor, "We are voting with a storm in our hearts." The official result claimed 98.12% approval, with a turnout of 99%. No credible observer believed these numbers.
But the constitution was a tiger that could not change its stripes. When the military faced a challenge to its powerโmost dramatically in the 2017 crackdown on Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine State, and again in 2021 when the elected government of Suu Kyi was ousted by a coupโthe document proved what Ko Htet had always said: it was a chain, not a charter. The 2008 constitution had enshrined the armyโs right to "safeguard the constitution." And so, on February 1, 2021, General Min Aung Hlaing cited the very same document to dissolve the civilian government, declaring a state of emergency. myanmar 2008 constitution
The story begins not in a grand parliament, but in a secluded military compound in Naypyidawโa city that had risen from the flat, dry plains like a secret. General Than Shwe, the reclusive head of the State Peace and Development Council, gazed at the final draft of the constitution. For fifteen years, since the junta annulled the 1990 election results, they had been crafting this moment. The text was a masterpiece of control: 15 chapters, 457 sections, each one a carefully laid brick in an edifice of continued military dominance. On May 10, 2008, the junta announced a



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