Myanmar's roadmap to democracy ( Burmese: ဒီမိုကရေစီလမ်းပြမြေပုံ ၇ ချက်; officially the Roadmap to Discipline-flourishing Democracy), announced by General Khin Nyunt on 30 August 2003 in state media, provided a seven-step process in restoring democracy in the country. [1] Endorsed by the State Peace and Development Council, it essentially describes the reassembly of the National Convention (အမျိုးသားညီလာခံ) in Nyaunghnapin, Hmawbi Township, Yangon Division to write a constitution, hold a national referendum to approve the constitution, hold a general election to elect members to the Hluttaw (legislative body), and finally hold parliamentary sessions.
This road map has been variously translated into English as: [2]
The translation found in the New Light of Myanmar is as follows: [3]
Exile media and pro-democracy groups were critical of the road map, for its lack of set deadlines or time frames. [1] The Myanmar Times claimed that the roadmap represented progress and hope for the eventual democratisation of the country. [4] UN envoy to Burma, Ibrahim Gambari pressed for a more "credible and inclusive" roadmap in 2008. [5]
Myanmar's roadmap to democracy ( Burmese: ဒီမိုကရေစီလမ်းပြမြေပုံ ၇ ချက်; officially the Roadmap to Discipline-flourishing Democracy), announced by General Khin Nyunt on 30 August 2003 in state media, provided a seven-step process in restoring democracy in the country. [1] Endorsed by the State Peace and Development Council, it essentially describes the reassembly of the National Convention (အမျိုးသားညီလာခံ) in Nyaunghnapin, Hmawbi Township, Yangon Division to write a constitution, hold a national referendum to approve the constitution, hold a general election to elect members to the Hluttaw (legislative body), and finally hold parliamentary sessions.
This road map has been variously translated into English as: [2]
The translation found in the New Light of Myanmar is as follows: [3]
Exile media and pro-democracy groups were critical of the road map, for its lack of set deadlines or time frames. [1] The Myanmar Times claimed that the roadmap represented progress and hope for the eventual democratisation of the country. [4] UN envoy to Burma, Ibrahim Gambari pressed for a more "credible and inclusive" roadmap in 2008. [5]