Myanmar: President third-time lucky in ousting political rival

Myanmar President Thein Sein had tried and failed at least twice before to topple his arch-rival Shwe Mann, but when armed police burst into the headquarters of the country’s ruling party late on August 12, he finally succeeded.

Police piled the mobile phones and computers from those inside on a desk and then stood by as the president’s supporters met to enact an order from the president to replace Shwe Mann as chairman of the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP).

By reasserting his grip on the party Thein Sein boosted his own prospects of retaining the presidency, while dampening optimism among those inside and outside the former Burma who hope for a quickening of reforms after an election in November.

“I heard people coming in and when I looked up from the computer I was surrounded by half a dozen armed guards,” said one person who was inside the building when the police entered, declining to be identified due to concern for personal safety.

“They did not draw their weapons. It’s obvious they didn’t want anybody to communicate to the outside world.”

Shwe Mann was not there, and the lockdown ensured neither he nor his allies could make any countermoves during the crucial hours in which the president’s supporters were taking control of the party.

The manoeuvre, which had echoes of the purges of Myanmar’s junta-ruled recent past, effectively took Shwe Mann out of the running for the presidency less than three months before the country’s first free general election in years.

Thein Sein, meanwhile, has cleared the way to either remain president himself or to impose a candidate of his choosing, if his party can form a majority coalition after the vote.

A former top-ranking general in a party dominated by retired military men, Shwe Mann was no radical reformist. But he had become a stronger voice for reform in the party and was working on a wide-ranging policy document that may have broadened the scope and pace of reforms, advisors said.

He drew the suspicion of the president’s faction by building ties with their nemesis, Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

“There was an internal crisis in the party,” Information Minister and spokesman for the president Ye Htut said. “This kind of leadership change is not a good thing for the USDP or any other political party. They did it as a last resort.”

Era of reform

Thein Sein ushered in the reforms since 2011 that have made resource-rich Myanmar a partial democracy after almost half a century of isolation and military rule, but many feel the reform process has stalled.

The sacking of Shwe Mann, who has made no secret of his ambition to become president, was another blow to international and domestic confidence in that process.

Shwe Mann used his position as speaker of the lower house of parliament in an increasingly assertive push to become the country’s leading presidential candidate.

He antagonised the military by backing Suu Kyi’s campaign to change the constitution, which grants unelected members of the armed forces a quarter of the seats in parliament.

Military role

That was a red flag for hardliners, already facing the prospect of Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy winning the lion’s share of contested seats in November’s poll.

“The hardliners from the military and the president strongly disliked his effort to amend the constitution,” said one USDP lawmaker, who was at party headquarters when the security forces locked it down, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“Shwe Mann had been trying to reform the USDP and the military ordered him to stop.”

Divisions worsened after the death in July of ex-colonel and USDP disciplinarian Aung Thaung, who was seen as a restraining influence on the ambitious Shwe Mann.

Aung Thaung was an ally of Shwe Mann but retained a strong relationship with both the president and the military. With him gone, the knives came out.

Tensions rose further the day before Shwe Mann was sacked, when the USDP’s parliamentary candidates list omitted the majority of a group of around 150 officers who retired from military service to run for parliament.