Myanmar Democratic Transition Forum to discuss the country’s progress
Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and
Minister of Information Dr Pe Myint are due to headline a
ground-breaking three-day forum to discuss the progress and hurdles
faced as Myanmar transitions to a full democracy.
The Myanmar Democratic Transition Forum will be held
at the Myanmar International Convention Center 2 in Nay Pyi Taw from
August 11 through to August 13, according to a press statement by the
Ministry of Information.
The forum will bring together more than thirty
speakers from the country and abroad on August 11-13, 2017 in an
exercise to review the progress towards democracy in Myanmar, the
challenges faced and the roadmap for the future.
Organised by the Ministry of Information with support
from a host of global and local partners, the conference will be opened
by State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi. After her inaugural speech,
Information Minister Dr Pe Myint will lay bare the context in which the
“Forum” is being organized, its objectives and what it seeks to achieve.
Several ministers and lawmakers , leaders of civil
society groups, media practitioners, business leaders and veteran civil
servants and representatives from Myanmar military will be joined by a
number of international participants that includes Indonesian Lt General
(retd) Agus Widjojo, former Vice Chairman of the Indonesia and Tentara
Nasional Indonesia’s (TNI) Chief of Territorial Affairs and, one of its
leading intellectuals.
Ambassadors from India, Norway and Singapore and
other diplomats, UN functionaries and leading academics specializing on
Myanmar will join the intense deliberations at the Forum.
Six plenary sessions bringing together more than
thirty speakers will be followed by as many ‘winding-up’ interactive
sessions that will seek out views from a cross section of more than 500
participants that would include special observers from foreign
governments and global bodies who support Myanmar’s transition to
democracy.
The Forum is seen as both a stock taking exercise in
Myanmar’s transition to democracy as to identify the hurdles that
confront the complex process and chart out a roadmap for the future.
“The Forum will be the largest review exercise on
Myanmar’s democratic process so far,” said U Myint Kyaw, deputy
permanent secretary at the Ministry of Information, who is heading the
organizational effort for the ‘Forum’.
“We are making detailed arrangements for three days
of intense deliberations that would be conducted in a free and frank
atmosphere.”
At a time when the world is drifting towards
intolerant right-wing sectarian regimes and even established democracies
are showing signs of erosion of the spirit of democracy, Myanmar is
struggling hard to emerge into a functional democracy, leaving behind
more than five decades of authoritarian rule.
In the process, it faces many challenges like the one
of establishing democratic federalism to ensure inclusive future for
the nation’s many ethnic minorities, many of whom have challenged the
Union government with force of arms for decades.
The Forum will inevitably focus on the ceasefires and
the peace-making processes they seek to herald and two full sessions
will be devoted to the issues involved.
One session will focus on the transition from a
command economy to a market economy, an important economic corollary to
the political transition from authoritarian rule to democracy.
The event will be live streamed on the Ministry of
Information’s Facebook (MOI Webportal Myanmar). Updates and news will
also be posted to the Ministry of Information’s Twitter (MOI Twitter)
Ref;http://www.mizzima.com/news-domestic/myanmar-democratic-transition-forum-discuss-country%E2%80%99s-progress
One year after the current government
took office the state of Myanmar's democratic transition will be
reflected on. Around 200 high-ranking representatives of all three
branches of power will participate.
The three-day forum will be divided into six sessions:
- Global Overview: Setting the Framework
- Political Transition: From Military to Civilian Government
- Economic Transition: From Central Command to Market Economy
- Transition from War to Peace: Conflict Resolution, Reconciliation and the Building of an Inclusive Multi-national State
- The Role of Media in Democratic Transition
- Stock-Taking: Where is Myanmar in its Transition?
Myanmar's
State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi will inaugurate a three-day
international conference here on Friday to review the progress towards
democracy in the country, the challenges ahead and the roadmap for the
future.
More than 30 speakers from Myanmar and abroad are to participate in the
"Forum on Myanmar's Democratic Transition", that will see ambassadors
from India, Norway and Singapore and other diplomats, UN functionaries
and leading academics specialising on Myanmar join in the deliberations.
The conference, being held at Convention Centre-2 here, is organised by
Myanmar's Ministry of Information with support from a host of global and
local partners.
After her inaugural speech, Information Minister Pe Myint will spell out
the context in which the Forum is being organised, its objectives and
what it seeks to achieve.
Several ministers and lawmakers, leaders of civil society groups, media
practitioners, business leaders and veteran civil servants and
representatives from Myanmar military will be joined by a number of
international participants that include Indonesian Lt. Gen. (retd) Agus
Widjojo, former Vice Chairman of Indonesia and Tentara Nasional
Indonesia's (TNI) Chief of Territorial Affairs, and one of its leading
intellectuals.
Six plenary sessions bringing together more than 30 speakers will be
followed by as many winding-up interactive sessions that will seek out
views from a cross-section of more than 500 participants that would
include special observers from foreign governments and global bodies who
support Myanmar's transition to democracy.
The Forum is seen as both a stock-taking exercise in Myanmar's
transition to democracy as to identify the hurdles that confront the
complex process and chart out a roadmap for the future.
"The Forum will be the largest review exercise on Myanmar's democratic
process so far," said U Myint Kyaw, deputy permanent secretary at the
Ministry of Information, who is heading the organisational effort for
the Forum.
At a time when the world is drifting towards intolerant right-wing
sectarian regimes and even established democracies are showing signs of
erosion of the spirit of democracy, Myanmar is struggling hard to emerge
into a functional democracy, leaving behind more than five decades of
authoritarian rule.
In the process, it faces many challenges like the one of establishing
democratic federalism to ensure inclusive future for the nation's many
ethnic minorities, many of whom have challenged the Union government
with force of arms for decades.
(Subir Bhaumik can be reached at sbhaum@gmail.com)
Ref:http://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ians/suu-kyi-to-open-international-forum-on-myanmar-s-democratic-transition-117080900960_1.html
State Counselor Forum on Democratic Transition in Myanmar Aung San Suu Kyi speech
Forum on Myanmar Democratic Transition!
Forum sections viewed on the First Session of the
global review of the topic in the framework of the "making" paper
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Session(1) Global Overview: Setting the Framework
Forum on Myanmar Democratic Transition of persons discussed in the Panel Discussion.
Panel Discussion on Rangoon, Head of foreign relations, Professor chair handsome diamond(1) U Thaung Tun, Myanmar (National Security Adviser)(2) H.E Vikram Misri (Indian Ambassador to Myanmar)(3) Dr Thant Myint-U (Yangon Heritage Trust Chairman and Founder)(4) Serge (Chairman) Mr Serge Pun (SPA and FMI) will be discussed.
Session(1) Global Overview: Setting the Framework (Panel Discussion)
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Session(2) Global Overview: Setting the Framework (Panel Discussion)
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Session(3) Global Overview: Setting the Framework (Panel Discussion)
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