MYANMAR’S parliament has elected Win Myint, a loyalist of Aung San Suu Kyi, as the new president, while she retained her executive authority over the government.

The vote comes as Suu Kyi’s civilian government has struggled to implement peace and national reconciliation, with the powerful military still embroiled in combat with ethnic rebels and under heavy international criticism for its brutal counter-insurgency campaign against the Muslim Rohingya minority.

Myanmar’s military ruled the country for half a century during which it was accused of widespread abuses before partially handing power to a civilian government in 2016. It is still in charge of security matters.

Like his predecessor Htin Kyaw, who retired last week for reasons of ill health, Win Myint, 66, is a Suu Kyi loyalist of many years.

Myanmar’s president is elected by a joint sitting of the two houses of parliament from among the country’s three vice-presidents, representing respectively the lower house, the upper house and the military. Win Myint received

403 votes of the combined houses against 211 for Myint Swe, the military’s nominee, and 18 for vice-president Henry Van Tio.