Myanmar : Aung San Suu Kyi was Thursday finally ruled out of the running to become Myanmar's next president, as her party nominated one of her most loyal aides to rule the formerly junta-run nation as her proxy.
Suu Kyi has vowed to rule "above" the president, despite being barred from the top office by an army-scripted constitution, as she strives to fulfil the huge mandate delivered by millions of voters in her National League for Democracy's landslide election victory in November.
Many in Myanmar had clung to faint hopes that the 70-year-old democracy campaigner could still head the country's first civilian government in decades, but months of talks with the powerful military failed to remove the legal obstacles in her way.
At a parliamentary session in Naypyidaw, Htin Kyaw, a genial 69-year-old economics graduate who now helps run Suu Kyi's charitable foundation, was named as one of the party's two presidential candidates.
He is widely seen as the anointed person to rule in her place as president when incumbent Thein Sein ends his five-year term at the end of March.
The NLD also nominated ethnic Chin MP Henry Van Theu, a law graduate, as a presidential candidate from the upper house. He is expected to become vice president.
The announcements end months of fevered speculation, as the party kept tight-lipped to avoid upsetting a delicate political transition in a nation where the military still casts a long shadow.
Suu Kyi spoke to MPs in Naypyidaw late Thursday at a closed-door meeting that was partially overheard by throngs of journalists outside.
"I believe people will like our chosen presidential nominees," she said.
Observers welcomed the choice.
"I think he's probably the best fit for the job, someone of proven and longstanding loyalty to (Suu Kyi) and also a person of considerable standing in his own right," Myanmar historian and political analyst Thant Myint-U told AFP.