A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Myanmar nationalists rally against constitution chang
Supporters
of Myanmar nationalist groups raise their hands in support of
preserving a constitutional clause barring Aung San Suu Kyi, the popular
leader of the country's new ruling party, from becoming head of state,
in Yangon, Myanmar Sunday, Feb. 28, 2016. Sunday's rally drew at least
350 people. The clause disqualifies anyone with a foreign spouse or
children from assuming the presidency. Suu Kyi's late husband was
British, as are her two sons, leaving her ineligible despite her mandate
as the head of the National League for Democracy (NLD), which secured a
landslide victory in a general election last November. (AP Photo/Gemunu
Amarasinghe)
A Buddhist monk walks as others sign an attendance register during a rally by Myanmar nationalist... Read more
Feb. 28, 2016
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Hundreds of nationalist Buddhist monks and their
supporters rallied in Myanmar's biggest city Sunday in support of
retaining a constitutional clause barring Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader
of the country's recently elected ruling party, from becoming head of
state.
Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party is set to take over
government in March after winning November's election in a landslide.
But Suu Kyi cannot become president because an article in the
military-dictated constitution bars anyone whose immediate family
members are foreign nationals from holding the office. Her two sons are
British, as was her late husband.
The National League for Democracy, or NLD, floated the idea of trying to
have the article suspended, but seems to have abandoned it due to
apparent opposition from the military.
Suu Kyi is likely to go ahead with her previously announced plan of
having a proxy for her serve as president, while she makes all the
executive decision
Sunday's rally in Yangon was believed to have been organized by the Buddhist nationalist group Ma Ba Tha, which is led by monks. The group is notorious for stirring up the anti-Muslim sentiment that has led to bloody sectarian violence.
Ma Ba Tha also had favored the incumbent military-backed government
party over Suu Kyi's NLD during last year's election campaign, but had
minimal influence on the vote. It is seeking to reivigorate its
political power after the setback.
Sunday's rally drew at least 350 people, many donning T-shirts reading
"Section 59(f) of the constitution is untouchable. It must be protected
from a national security angle."
The demonstrators defended retaining the article for nationalistic
purposes, claiming their position was unrelated to Suu Kyi's possible
bid for the presidency.
"We support this event ... because we don't want outsiders, foreigners,
overwhelming our country," said organizer Thant Myo Oo. "Not only Suu
Kyi, whoever is connected with the outsiders, we cannot accept."
Myanmar began a shift to civilian rule in 2011, when a quasi-civilian
government took power under President Thein Sein, a retired general. The
country's fragile transition has been marred by ongoing civil conflict
and several bouts of deadly riots between the Buddhist majority and
minority Muslims.
Ethno-religious tensions gave rise to growing nationalist sentiment and
organized efforts to "protect the national race and religion,"
mobilizing masses nationwide and enacting legislation widely viewed as
discriminatory.
Event organizers denied Sunday that they were members of Ma Ba Tha.
"Ma Ba Tha is a religious organization; it's not a nationalist
organization," said Win Ko Ko Latt, an organizer and speaker at the
rally, who said his intention was to protect Myanmar's 135 officially
recognized ethnicities. "Anything representing nationalism, we will
support fully."