Myanmar lawmakers say they’re under house arrest after coup

Hundreds of members of Myanmar’s Parliament remained confined inside their government housing in the country’s capital on Tuesday, a day after the military staged a coup and detained senior politicians including Nobel laureate and de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
Suu Kyi’s National League for
Democracy party, meanwhile, released a statement calling for the military to
honor the results of last November’s election and release all of those detained.
“The commander-in-chief seizing the power of the
nation is against the constitution and it also neglects the sovereign power of
people,” the party said in a statement on one of its Facebook pages.
One of the detained lawmakers said
he and about 400 other parliament members were able to speak with one another
inside the compound and communicate with their constituencies by phone, but
were not allowed to leave the housing complex in Naypyitaw. He said Suu Kyi was
not being held with them.
The lawmaker said police were
inside the complex and soldiers were outside it. He said the politicians,
comprised of members of Suu Kyi’s party and various smaller parties, spent a
sleepless night worried that they might be taken away but were otherwise OK.
“We had to stay awake and be alert,” the
lawmaker told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity out of concern for
his safety.
The takeover came the morning
lawmakers from all of the country had gathered in the capital for the opening
of the new parliamentary session and follows days of worry that a coup was
coming. The military said the seizure was necessary because the government had
not acted on the military’s claims of fraud in November’s elections — in which
Suu Kyi’s ruling party won a majority of the parliamentary seats up for grabs —
and because it allowed the election to go ahead despite the coronavirus
pandemic.
An announcement read on
military-owned Myawaddy TV on Monday said Commander-in-Chief Senior Gen. Min
Aung Hlaing would be in charge of the country for one year. Late Monday, the
office of the commander-in-chief announced the names of new Cabinet ministers.
The 11-member Cabinet is composed of military generals, former military
generals and former advisers to a previous government headed by former general
Thein Sein.
The coup is a dramatic backslide
for Myanmar, which was emerging from decades of strict military rule and
international isolation that began in 1962. It now presents a test for the
international community, which had ostracized Myanmar while it was under
military rule and then enthusiastically embraced Suu Kyi’s government as a sign
the country was finally on the path to democracy. U.S. President Joe Biden
threatened new sanctions, which the country had previously faced.
On Tuesday in Yangon, the
country’s biggest city, the streets were quieter than usual but markets were
open, street vendors were still cooking food and taxis and buses were still
running.
There were no outward signs of
heavy security, but the unease that set in after Monday’s events still
lingered. People were removing the once ubiquitous red flags of Suu Kyi’s party
from their homes and businesses.
The English-language Myanmar Times
headlined the state of emergency, while other state-owned newspapers showed
front-page photographs of Monday’s National Defense and Security Council
meeting, which the newly appointed Acting President Myint Swe and Min Aung
Hlaing attended with other military officials.
The military has maintained that
its actions are legally justified — citing a section of the constitution it
drafted that allows it to take control in times of national emergency — though
Suu Kyi’s party spokesman as well as many international observers have said it
amounts to a coup.
The takeover marks a shocking fall
from power for Suu Kyi, a Nobel peace laureate who had lived under house arrest
for years as she tried to push her country toward democracy and then became its
de facto leader after her party won elections in 2015.
Suu Kyi had been a fierce critic
of the army during her years in detention. But after her shift from democracy
icon to politician, she needed to work with the generals, who despite allowing
elections had never fully given up power.
While the 75-year-old has remained
popular at home, Suu Kyi’s deference to the generals — going so far as to
defend their crackdown on Rohingya Muslims that the United States and others
have labeled genocide — has left her reputation tarnished abroad.
The coup was met with
international condemnation and many countries called for the release of the
detained leaders.
Biden called the military’s
actions “a direct assault on the country’s transition to democracy and the rule
of law” and said Washington would not hesitate to restore sanctions.
“The United States will stand up for democracy
wherever it is under attack,” he said in a statement.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres called the developments a “serious blow to democratic reforms,” according
to his spokesman. The Security Council will hold an emergency meeting on the
military’s actions — probably on Tuesday, according to Britain, which currently
holds the council presidency.