Myanmar’s latest political transition offers the illusion of closure, but little clarity. After years of conflict triggered by the 2021 coup, a new administration under Min Aung Hlaing takes charge amid ongoing resistance and territorial fragmentation. For regional observers and policymakers alike, the real question is whether this moment signals consolidation or simply another phase of prolonged instability.
Myanmar’s complex experiment with limited democracy (2011–21) was derailed by the military coup on 1 February 2021. A five-year-long nightmare, marked by violent internal conflicts, instability, and economic stagnation, followed. After the imperfect elections held between December 2025 and January 2026, a new government led by President Min Aung Hlaing assumed charge on 10 April 2026. Thus, yet another chapter opens in the nation’s vexed history at a time when the Resistance forces control a sizable segment of territory and clashes between them and the Tatmadaw, the military, continue unabated. Will it be a new dawn bringing peace, stability, and development, or will the political divide persist?
Pondering over this conundrum, memories flood my mind about my three-decade-long association with a country with two names—Burma, which became Myanmar in 1989.