Outgoing Myanmar President Cancels U.S. Visit to Monitor Political Transition

W460

Myanmar's outgoing president has scrapped a planned trip to the U.S. next week in order to oversee the power hand-off to Aung San Suu Kyi's new government, a presidential spokesman told AFP Saturday.

Thein Sein was due to attend a summit for leaders from the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) bloc hosted by U.S. president Barack Obama, who has staked large political capital in Myanmar's passage towards greater democracy.

"The president decided not to attend the meeting because this is transition period. The transition process needs to be stable and smooth, so he thinks he should take care of it," Zaw Htay, director of the president's office, told AFP.

Suu Kyi and hundreds of newly-elected MPs from her National League for Democracy party (NLD) took their seats in parliament two weeks ago after dominating the country's fairest poll in decades in November.

But what observers said was a surprisingly smooth initial phase of the political transition has since been clouded by rumors and speculation -- especially over who will be tipped to succeed Thein Sein as president.

The wildly popular democracy icon Suu Kyi is barred from the post by a charter penned by the military that kept her under house arrest for 15 years during repressive junta rule.

The constitution also reserves a quarter of parliamentary seats for appointed military officers, handing the army an effective veto on charter change.

With the NLD-dominated parliament putting off presidential nominations until late March, rumors have swirled that the party is engaged in back-room talks in a bid to amend the charter and pave the way for a Suu Kyi presidency.

The delicacy of the transition was underscored by Thein Sein's last-minute decision to cancel the California trip, seen as his final chance to cement a legacy on the global stage as the reformist leader who guided Myanmar out of five decades of cloistered military junta rule.

Myanmar's Vice President Nyan Tun will now attend the February 15-16 summit at the Sunnylands estate in California, the president's office said.

The Sunnylands gathering comes as Washington is striving to bolster its influence in Southeast Asia as a counterpoint to China's rising power in the region.

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