YANGON: Booted from Aung San Suu Kyiâs âchaotic and autocraticâ party, one female MP is now taking on Myanmarâs national heroine in the upcoming election, claiming the country needs to work with, not against, a military accused of genocide.
Voters are expected to return Suu Kyiâs National League for Democracy (NLD) party to power at the Nov 8 polls â only the second since the country emerged from decades of outright military rule â but Thet Thet Khine is still hoping to make her mark.
She has undergone many incarnations, from student activist to medical doctor then businesswoman and jewellery magnate â before being elected as an NLD MP at Suu Kyiâs side in 2015.
But she has since fallen from grace.
Ousted from the NLD last year â she says for speaking her mind â the 53-year-old hopes to entice voters to her Peopleâs Pioneer Party (PPP).
âThe NLD is no longer the solution for the country,â she tells AFP at her Yangon mansion, decorated with neoclassical columns, chandeliers and gold-trimmed furniture.
âThe way the party is run is very chaotic and very autocratic,â she says, claiming loyalty is valued over competence, and that there is a culture of micro-management and an overriding fear of upsetting The Lady.
âOne person makes all the decisions.â
There is widespread disillusionment with the NLD in many ethnic minority areas, but the party boasts a loyal fanbase in the dominant Bamar heartlands.
And, for many, Suu Kyi embodies the NLD.
She leads the government as state counsellor, holds the reins to international relations as foreign minister and has been front and centre in the countryâs fight against coronavirus.
Thet Thet Khine says speaking out publicly, has meant she and relatives have faced online abuse.
âMiddle wayâ?
Thet Thet Khineâs family made its wealth in Myanmarâs prized ruby industry.
As a medical student, she joined the pro-democracy movement that swept the country in 1988 before it was brutally suppressed by military force.
The protests also propelled to fame Suu Kyi, who was âso special to us,â she remembers.
After the crackdown, she chose business but returned to politics after the country emerged from military rule.
Now head of her own party in a fiercely patriarchal society, she describes a collective leadership in her relatively youthful PPP, where the average candidateâs age is 46.
The party promises more jobs, higher wages and lower taxes although gives few details about how this would be financed.
It seems to be targeting a broad demographic, fielding Myanmarâs first openly gay candidate, one Muslim nominee and one hardline Buddhist, known for his Islamophobic stance.
âFew politicians understand the business world so thatâs a plus for her,â says Yangon-based analyst Khin Zaw Win.
One priority is bridging the rift between the civilian government and military, a strained relationship mirrored by that of Suu Kyi and army chief Min Aung Hlaing.
âIf the father and mother are fighting…the kids donât know what to do,â Thet Thet Khine explains, adding the military is âpart of the solutionâ in the state-building process.
Under a constitution it scripted, the armed forces retain immense powers, holding three key ministries and a quarter of all parliamentary seats â giving it an effective veto on legislation.
Her party, Thet Thet Khine claims, offers a âmiddle wayâ.
But half a century of brutal junta rule has left many deeply suspicious of a military that jailed thousands for their beliefs, subjugated ethnic minorities and oversaw steep economic decline.
âThey made a lot of wrong decisions and did a lot of mismanagement in the past,â she admits but insists the new generation of soldiers are âembracing professionalismâ.
Rohingya crackdown an âoverreactionâ
Allying herself with the military will mean âsheâll lose a certain amount of supportâ, predicts Khin Zaw Win â who puts the tactic down to pragmatism.
âShe needs something to lean on.â
The military stands accused of ongoing rights abuses in decades-long wars against several ethnic armed groups.
In 2017, Rohingya Muslims recounted widespread murder, rape and arson in military operations that now see the country charged with genocide at the UNâs top court â a trial Thet Thet Khine claims is âunnecessaryâ.
The military âmaybe overreacted…but itâs not genocide or ethnic cleansingâ.
Rohingya ancestry has been evident for centuries in Rakhine, but they are widely seen as illegal interlopers.
The Rohingya âwill never be indigenousâ, she says but concedes those whose families migrated more than three or four generations ago should have been accepted.
âThey should have citizenship and therefore (face) no more discriminationâ.
Instead, virtually all the 600,000 Rohingya remaining in Myanmar will be disenfranchised in this election, just like the last.
Their plight is not a priority for most parties, including the PPP.
Running in under a third of constituencies, Thet Thet Khine says she would be happy to clinch five percent of seats, admitting this is a dry run for the 2025 election when Suu Kyi will be 80.
Suu Kyi âdoesnât believe in a succession plan, so after her era…the NLD will go bankrupt in business terms.â
âBut I think she will hold onto power until her last day.â â AFP









