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Myanmar nominates Suu Kyi’s former driver for president

In this file picture taken on November 13, 2010, U Htin Kyaw (left), a senior National League for Democracy official stands next to Aung San Suu Kyi at her residence on the day of her release from house arrest in Yangon where she was detained for nearly two decades. Htin Kyaw has been nominated to be Myanmar's next president, as the Nobel laureate looks to rule her former junta-run homeland through a trusted proxy. – AFP pic, March 10, 2016. In this file picture taken on November 13, 2010, U Htin Kyaw (left), a senior National League for Democracy official stands next to Aung San Suu Kyi at her residence on the day of her release from house arrest in Yangon where she was detained for nearly two decades. Htin Kyaw has been nominated to be Myanmar's next president, as the Nobel laureate looks to rule her former junta-run homeland through a trusted proxy. – AFP pic, March 10, 2016. Aung San Suu Kyi's party today nominated her former driver and close aide to be Myanmar's next president, as the Nobel laureate looks to rule her former junta-run homeland through a trusted proxy.

Suu Kyi has vowed to rule "above" the president, despite being barred from top office by the army-scripted constitution, as she strives to fulfil the huge mandate delivered by millions of Myanmar voters in her National League for Democracy's landslide election victory in November.

"I would like to propose U Htin Kyaw, from the NLD," said Khin San Hlaing, a lower house MP for Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, which will also nominate another candidate from the upper house.

The selection of Htin Kyaw, a genial 69-year-old who went to school with Suu Kyi and now helps run her charitable foundation, comes after months of fevered speculation.

Even her own MPs were kept in the dark about the deliberations, with the party fearful of upsetting a delicate political transition in a nation where the military still casts a long shadow.

But the process of picking a leader to replace outgoing President Thein Sein later this month is not yet over.

Lawmakers from the lower and upper houses of parliament will elect one candidate each, while the military also puts forward their own nominee.

Unelected soldiers still make up a quarter of Myanmar's legislature, but the NLD enjoys a comfortable parliamentary majority thanks to the historic November polls, the freest in generations.  – AFP, March 10, 2016.

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