Myanmar election: Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi will be "above the president" if she wins

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi said on Thursday she would be "above the president" if her party wins a historic election on November 8, defying a constitutional ban on becoming head of state herself.

The general election is the first since a quasi-civilian government took power in 2011 after nearly 50 years of a military dictatorship, and is widely regarded as a referendum on Myanmar's reform process.

"I will be above the president," a relaxed and smiling Suu Kyi told reporters in the country's largest city Yangon, in the Nobel laureate's final press conference ahead of the vote.

"It is a very simple message. The constitution says nothing about someone being above the president."

Suu Kyi said there had been irregularities in advance voting, fraud and intimidation, and that the process was falling short of its billing as the first free and fair election in 25 years.

Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) is expected to do well in the election. The party won a landslide in the last open election in 1990, which was annulled by the junta. Suu Kyi was by then already under house arrest, which was to last most of the next 20 years.

The long gap between the election on Sunday and the new government taking power in February next year was also a cause for concern, she said, addressing reporters in a tent on the lawn in front of her Yangon residence.

In a video at the start of her two-month campaign, she requested vigilance from the international community during the transition period, which she said was almost as important as a free and fair election.

The political activity of the radical Buddhist group Ma Ba Tha, which has sharply criticised the NLD for not supporting a raft of legislation seen as anti-Muslim drafted by the group, was unconstitutional, Suu Kyi said.

Suu Kyu said that the problems of the Rohingya, the country's persecuted Muslim minority living in western Rakhine State, should not be exaggerated and that the whole country was experiencing a "dramatic situation" ahead of the vote.

Suu Kyi has been widely criticised for not speaking out enough on the Rohingya, who live in virtually apartheid-like conditions in Rakhine.

related articles
Myanmar: Religious tensions grow as thousands of nationalist monks stage rally
Myanmar: Religious tensions grow as thousands of nationalist monks stage rally

Myanmar: Religious tensions grow as thousands of nationalist monks stage rally

Peace in Myanmar edges closer as eight armed groups sign ceasefire deal
Peace in Myanmar edges closer as eight armed groups sign ceasefire deal

Peace in Myanmar edges closer as eight armed groups sign ceasefire deal

Myanmar: How a powerful Buddhist nationalist group is shaping the country\'s future
Myanmar: How a powerful Buddhist nationalist group is shaping the country's future

Myanmar: How a powerful Buddhist nationalist group is shaping the country's future

Myanmar: Muslims at risk of exclusion from historic election
Myanmar: Muslims at risk of exclusion from historic election

Myanmar: Muslims at risk of exclusion from historic election

News
Conservatives urge incoming Archbishop to drop £100m slavery reparations
Conservatives urge incoming Archbishop to drop £100m slavery reparations

Should church funds be used for slavery reparations? A group of Conservative MPs and peers think not.

What if the Good Shepherd is closer than you think?
What if the Good Shepherd is closer than you think?

Pastoral care is not a task reserved for a handful of gifted individuals; it is the life of Christ, quietly at work inside ordinary believers.

Anglican Mainstream sees monthly growth despite web hosting suspension
Anglican Mainstream sees monthly growth despite web hosting suspension

Conservative Christian website, Anglican Mainstream, was surprised to see visitor numbers rise after being forced to relocate its website hosting after GoDaddy closed its account.

Missionary turned soldier in Ukraine balances faith with harsh frontline realities
Missionary turned soldier in Ukraine balances faith with harsh frontline realities

A former missionary who is now serving as a soldier in the Ukrainian army has spoken about the realities of faith for a man tasked with killing in defence of his country.