Constitution: Myanmar 2008

Thus, the constitution endures—a paradox of paper and power, of storms and silence, a living artifact of a nation’s long, unfinished struggle between the will of the gun and the whisper of the ballot.

Outside, the rain from the Bay of Bengal continued to fall, just as it did in 2008. And somewhere in the delta, a child found a waterlogged copy of the constitution washed up on a riverbank—its pages already dissolving, its words bleeding into the mud. The story of Myanmar’s 2008 constitution is not over; it is still being written in protests, in prisons, in jungles where new armies train, and in the hearts of those who still believe that one day, the people will write their own social contract. myanmar 2008 constitution

The most controversial clause was hidden in the heart of the document: Article 59(f). It stated that a candidate for the presidency, as well as their spouse, parents, and children, must be "loyal to the state and its people." In practice, this was widely understood to bar Aung San Suu Kyi—whose children held foreign citizenship—from ever leading the country. The constitution also reserved 25% of parliamentary seats for the military, unilaterally, without elections. And during a state of emergency, power would automatically transfer back to the commander-in-chief. Thus, the constitution endures—a paradox of paper and