The first
freely elected parliament in Myanmar for 50 years has held its opening session.
Hundreds of
new MPs, mostly from the National League for Democracy (NLD) but also some
smaller parties, have been sworn and taken their seats.
The NLD, led
by Aung San Suu Kyi, won 80% of contested seats in November's historic
election.
But a
quarter of all seats are reserved for the military, which also retains control
of key ministries.
One of the
new parliament's first jobs will be to choose a new president when outgoing
leader Thein Sein steps down at the end of March.
Ms Suu Kyi,
who spent 15 years under house arrest under the former military government,
cannot take the top job.
A clause in
the constitution which was widely seen as specifically targeting her says
anyone whose children are foreign cannot be president. Her sons are British not
Burmese.
She has been
very clear, however, that she intends to run Myanmar anyway, saying she would
be "above the president".
Ms Suu Kyi,
who has not named a possible candidate, did not speak to reporters as she
entered the building.
But NLD MP
Nyein Thit told the AFP news agency: "We will work to get human rights and
democracy as well as peace."
Another NLD
MP, Khin Maung Myint, told Associated Press: "I never imagined that our
party would be able to form the government. Even the public didn't think we
could have an NLD government. But now it is like a shock to us and to the world
too."
Lama Naw
Aung, an MP for the minority Kachin State Democracy Party, said a seat in
parliament was "a good opportunity for us to speak out for the ethnic
people and demand indigenous rights", BBC reports.


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