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Myanmar leader would ‘accept’ Suu Kyi as president

YANGON, Sept 30 – Myanmar leader Thein Sein has said in an interview he would accept democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi as president if elected, but added he could not alone amend rules that bar her from power.

Former general Thein Sein has paid rare tributes to Myanmar’s Nobel laureate during a landmark tour of the United States where he has burnished his reformist credentials by insisting that his country will continue its strides towards democracy after decades of army rule.

The Myanmar leader, whose meeting with Suu Kyi in New York marked the latest sign of warm relations between the nation’s leader and its most famous former political prisoner, told the BBC that there were “no problems” between them.

“If the people accept her, I will have to accept her. As I said before, we are now working together,” he said, according to translated excerpts of an interview with the British broadcaster aired Saturday.

But he insisted that he could not act alone to remove the barriers impeding the democracy champion’s route to the presidency, as the country heads towards crucial 2015 elections.

Myanmar’s constitution currently prohibits those with close foreign relatives from holding high office and Suu Kyi, who married a British academic, has two sons living in the West.

“I alone cannot change the constitution. This depends on the wish of the people and also the wishes of the members of parliament,” he said.

Thein Sein also underscored the continuing importance of the military, which is guaranteed a quarter of the seats in Myanmar’s parliament.

“The constitution clearly defines the responsibility of the military and every sector of the parliament. We cannot exclude the army from politics,” he said.

Thein Sein has won international plaudits — and the suspension or lifting of most Western sanctions — for the fast pace of change in Myanmar since he took the helm of a quasi-civilian regime last year.

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Hundreds of political prisoners have been freed and Suu Kyi — herself locked up for a total of 15 years — has now entered parliament after her National League for Democracy (NLD) party swept key by-elections in April.

Thein Sein, who was a senior figure in the previous junta, has met Suu Kyi on several occasions amid efforts to steer the long-isolated country towards democracy and economic prosperity.

In his address to the United Nations this week, the Myanmar leader went further than ever in his praise of the veteran activist, whose struggle for change in her impoverished homeland has earned her deep affection both at home and abroad.

“As a Myanmar citizen I would like to congratulate her for the honors she has received in this country in recognition of her efforts for democracy,” he said.

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