The military ouster of Aung San Suu Kyi’s government in Myanmar was “inevitable,” army chief General Min Aung Hlaing said Tuesday, as Washington formally designated the takeover as a coup.
Myanmar’s powerful military stunned the nation Monday when it detained Suu Kyi and other National League for Democracy (NLD) party leaders in pre-dawn raids ahead of a scheduled resumption of parliament.
General Min Aung Hlaing was given “legislative, judicial and executive powers”, effectively returning Myanmar to military rule after a 10-year experiment with democracy.
In his first public comments since the putsch, the general said the military takeover was “in line with the law” after the government failed to respond to its grievances over alleged electoral fraud.
“After many requests, this way was inevitable for the country and that’s why we had to choose it,” he said during the first cabinet meeting, according to a speech posted on the military’s official Facebook page.
In Washington, the State Department said it had assessed that “Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of (Myanmar’s) ruling party, and Win Myint, the duly elected head of government, were deposed in a military coup.”
The designation means the U.S. cannot assist the Myanmar government, though any impact will be mainly symbolic as almost all assistance goes to non-governmental entities. The military was already under U.S. sanctions over its brutal campaign against the Rohingya minority.
In the capital Naypyidaw, armed troops were stationed outside the dormitories for parliamentarians.
One NLD lawmaker described it as “an open-air detention center,” though by nightfall some politicians said they were free to leave.
A statement on the NLD’s verified Facebook page called for Suu Kyi’s release, as well as that of President Win Myint and all detained party members.
It also demanded the military “recognize the confirmed result of the 2020 general election.”
By afternoon, a party officer said there had been no direct contact with Suu Kyi, though a neighbor saw her in her Naypyidaw residence.
“She walks sometimes in her compound to let others know she’s in good health,” NLD press officer Kyi Toe told AFP.
On Tuesday evening, in the country’s commercial hub of Yangon, residents honked car horns and clattered pots and pans in protest at the coup, following a social media campaign.❐