Ethnic Affairs Minister

State or regional official in Myanmar

An Ethnic Affairs Minister (Burmese: တိုင်းရင်းသားရေးရာ ဝန်ကြီးများ) is a representative elected by an ethnic minority in a given state or region of Myanmar if that division is composed of an ethnic minority population of 0.1 percent or greater of the total populace [roughly 51,400 people].[1] If one of the country's ethnic minorities counts their state of residence as its namesake, however, it is not granted an ethnic affairs minister (e.g. there is no Mon ethnic affairs minister in Mon State). Only voters who share an ethnic identity with a given ethnic affairs minister post are allowed to vote for candidates to the position.[2]

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Composition

There are currently 29 Ethnic Affairs Ministers elected to the State and Regional Hluttaws, with the number of Ministers per Hluttaw ranging from 1 to 7 sitting at once. Ethnic Affairs Ministers are considered to be a member of their State or Regional legislature, but unlike State MPs represent a geographically dispersed ethnic group, and are accountable only to them for the purposes of re-election. Ethnic Affairs Ministers are elected in all but one of Myanmar's states and regions, with only Chin State electing no Ministers at all.[3]

Ministers are not elected for ethnicities that are a majority of their state/region, or where a state/region already has a self-administered district or self-administered zone dedicated to those ethnic groups.[1] Groups represented by an Ethnic Affairs Minister in a particular state do not need to be a minority elsewhere in the country - the Bamar people have ministers in Shan, Kayin, Kachin, Kayah, and Mon States, despite forming a majority of approximately 68% of the population nationwide. Likewise, some minorities such as the Rakhine may have Ethnic Affairs Ministers in some regions of the country where they are a minority despite also having their own namesake state where they are a majority.

Currently 14 different ethnic groups are eligible to vote for at least one Ethnic Affairs Minister, although they may only do so if they reside within the state for which the minister is elected. Despite meeting the criteria, the Danu, Kokang, Naga, Palaung, and Wa people are ineligible to elect a minister because they enjoy self-determination within a designated Self-Administered Zone or Division.

Current Ethnic Affairs Ministers

The current Ethnic Affairs Ministers were elected in the 2015 General Election, which resulted in a sweeping victory for the National League for Democracy.

Ethnic Affairs Minister elections, 2015[4]
Party Seats Net gain/loss Seats % Votes % Votes +/−
  NLD 21 Increase21 72.41
  USDP 2 Decrease9 6.90
  ANP 1 Increase1 3.45
  ANDP 1 Increase1 3.45
  LHNDP 1 Increase1 3.45
  LNDP 1 Increase1 3.45
  TLNDP 1 Increase1 3.45
  Independent 1 Steady 3.45
  SNLD 0 Decrease1 0
  Others 0 Decrease6 0
Total 29 100 100
Elected Ethnic Affairs Ministers
Division Ethnicity Political Party Name
Kachin State (4) Bamar NLD Khin Maung Myint (a.k.a. U Dake)
Lisu NLD Arrti Yaw Han
Rawang NLD Yan Nann Phone
Shan NLD Sai Sein Lin
Kayah State (1) Bamar USDP Hla Myo Swe
Kayin State (3) Bamar NLD Nwe Pwe Say
Pa-O NLD Lehone Myo Tin
Mon NLD Min Tin Win
Mon State (3) Bamar NLD Shwe Myint
Kayin NLD Aung Myint Khaing
Pa-O NLD San Wint Khaing
Rakhine State (1) Chin NLD Pone Bwe
Shan State (7) Akha ANDP Tun Hlaing
Bamar USDP Aung Than Maung
Intha NLD Are Bay Hla
Kachin Independent Zote Daung
Kayan (aka Padaung) NLD Khun Aye Maung
Lahu LHNDP Yaw That
Lisu LNDP Igu Sar
Ayeyarwady Region (2) Kayin NLD Gar Moe Myat Myat Thu
Rakhine NLD Tin Saw
Bago Region (1) Kayin NLD Naw Pwal Say
Magway Region (1) Chin NLD Hla Tun
Mandalay Region (1) Shan NLD Sai Kyaw Zaw
Sagaing Region (2) Chin NLD Lal Htaung Htan
Shan TLNDP Mwe Mwe Khin
Tanintharyi Region (1) Kayin NLD Saw Lu Ka
Yangon Region (2) Kayin NLD Pan Thinzar Myo
Rakhine ANP Zaw Aye Maung

See also

  • iconAsia portal

References

  1. ^ a b "Myanmar 2015 General Elections Fact Sheet" (PDF). Ifes.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-11-22. Retrieved 2015-11-26.
  2. ^ Zaw, Nobel (15 January 2015). "Ethnic Affairs Ministers Defend Seat at Negotiating Table after Suu Kyi Remarks". The Irrawaddy.
  3. ^ "State/Region Hluttaw Results: Graphics". Mmtimes.com. 2015-11-17. Retrieved 2015-11-26.
  4. ^ "Announcement 94/2015". Union Election Commission. Archived from the original on 20 November 2015. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
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