Myanmar’s democracy heroine Aung San Suu Kyi on Thursday vowed to run the government if her opposition party wins this Sunday’s landmark election, despite being barred from the presidency.
The former junta-ruled country goes to the polls on Sunday in elections which could see the army’s decades-long grip on power substantially loosened.
Suu Kyi has towered over Myanmar’s politics after a decades-long struggle for democracy and her party is expected to make major gains at Sunday’s polls if the vote is free and fair.
Yet under the military-scripted constitution, the 70-year- old is barred from running for the presidency by a clause believed to have been written specifically to thwart her bid for the country’s top office.
But in bullish remarks to international media ahead of Sunday’s vote she vowed to be “above the president” in the event of a victory by her National League for Democracy (NLD) party. “I will run the government and we will have a president who will work in accordance with the policies of the NLD,” she told reporters gathered on the lawn of her Yangon home, the same mansion she was confined to during years of house arrest by the former generals.