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Union Government of Myanmar
Executive body of the Burmese government
Executive body of the Burmese government
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| government_name | Union Government of Myanmar |
| nativename | |
| border | central |
| image | Myanmar State Seal.png |
| image_size | 200px |
| alt | State seal of Myanmar |
| image2 | |
| image_size2 | |
| alt2 | |
| caption | State seal of Myanmar |
| date_established | |
| date_dissolved | |
| state | Myanmar |
| leader_title | Prime Minister |
| appointed | National Defence and Security Council |
| ministries | Thirty-one |
| responsible | National Defence and Security Council |
| budget | |
| address | Presidential Palace, Naypyidaw |
| url |
The Union Government (), is the executive body of the government of Myanmar led by the prime minister of Myanmar. The cabinet of Nyo Saw is the current cabinet.
Qualifications
The Constitution of Myanmar stipulates that Union Ministers must be Burmese citizens who have been living in the country for at least ten consecutive years:
- persons who have attained the age of 40 years;
- persons who have qualifications, with the exception of the age limit, prescribed in Section 120 for Pyithu Hluttaw representatives;
- persons whose qualification does not breach the provisions under Section 121 which disqualify a person from standing for election as Pyithu Hluttaw representatives;
- persons loyal to the Union and its citizens
The Commander-in-Chief appoints the Ministers of Defence, Home Affairs and Border Affairs, selecting candidates from within the Defence Services (Tatmadaw), while the President appoints the remainder.
The President also appoints the Deputy Ministers of the respective ministries, following the same qualifications as those for Union Ministers, with the exception of age (35 years, instead of 40).
Nyo Saw's cabinet (2025–present)
Main article: Nyo Saw's cabinet
On 31 July 2025, junta leader Min Aung Hlaing appointed Nyo Saw as prime minister. His appointment came as the country preparing for general elections later in the year.
Provisional Government of Myanmar (2021–2025)
Main article: Provisional Government of Myanmar
The Cabinet was sworn on 1 February 2021 in Naypyidaw, after being appointed by Commander-in-Chief of Defence Services Min Aung Hlaing.
Heads and Deputy Heads
| Office | Name | Term in office | Took office | Left office | Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chairman of the State Administration Council | Min Aung Hlaing | 2 February 2021 | Incumbent | ||
| Prime Minister of Myanmar | 1 August 2021 | ||||
| Vice Chairman of the State Administration Council | Soe Win | 2 February 2021 | |||
| Deputy Prime Minister of Myanmar | 1 August 2021 | ||||
| Mya Tun Oo | 1 February 2023 | ||||
| Tin Aung San | |||||
| Soe Htut | |||||
| Win Shein |
Members
Win Myint's Cabinet (March 2018 - February 2021)
Main article: Win Myint's Cabinet
The cabinet was sworn on 30 March 2018 at the Assembly of the Union in Naypyidaw, after being appointed by President Win Myint.
Heads and Deputy Heads
| Term of Service | Took office | Left office | Time in office |
|---|---|---|---|
| Office | Name | ||
| President | Win Myint | 30 March 2018 | 1 February 2021 |
| Vice President 1 | Myint Swe | 30 March 2018 | 1 February 2021 |
| Vice President 2 | Henry Van Thio | 30 March 2018 | 1 February 2021 |
| State Counsellor | Aung San Suu Kyi | 30 March 2018 | 1 February 2021 |
Members
Htin Kyaw's Cabinet (March 2016 – March 2018)
Main article: Htin Kyaw's Cabinet
The Cabinet was sworn on 30 March 2016 at the Assembly of the Union in Naypyidaw, after being appointed by President Htin Kyaw, after the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) won a majority in both chambers of the parliament. Under the constitution, three ministers – of Border Affairs, Defence and Home Affairs – are appointed by the National Defence and Security Council. The remaining 15 ministers were appointed by Htin Kyaw and included a majority from the NLD, but also two members of the former ruling party, the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) and a number of independents. The cabinet head, Htin Kyaw, resigned on 21 March 2018 and Win Myint became the new president.
Thein Sein's Cabinet (March 2011 - March 2016)
Main article: Thein Sein's Cabinet
Cabinet resignations (August 2015)
On 12 August 2015, Minister Tin Naing Thein, Myat Hein, Khin Yi and Than Htay, who will be competing in the 8 November election had resigned, and Lt-Gen Wai Lwin and Lt-Gen Thet Naing Win had moved to their former military responsibilities, replaced by Lt-Gen Sein Win and Lt-Gen Kyaw Swe.
July 2014 – August 2015 Cabinet
| Office | Name | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation | Myint Hlaing | ||||
| Minister of Border Affairs | url=http://www.myanmar.com/newspaper/nlm/Feb14_02.html | access-date=14 February 2013 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121113170332/http://www.myanmar.com/newspaper/nlm/Feb14_02.html | archive-date=13 November 2012 }} |
| Minister of Commerce | Win Myint | ||||
| Minister of Communications and Information Technology | Myat Hein | ||||
| Minister of Construction | Kyaw Lwin | ||||
| Minister of Cooperatives | Kyaw Hsan | ||||
| Minister of Culture | Aye Myint Kyu | ||||
| Minister of Defence | Lt. Gen. Wai Lwin | ||||
| Minister of Education | Khin San Yee | ||||
| Minister of Electric Power | Khin Maung Soe | ||||
| Minister of Energy | Zayar Aung | ||||
| Minister of Finance | Win Shein | ||||
| Minister of Foreign Affairs | Wunna Maung Lwin | ||||
| Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry | Win Tun | ||||
| Minister of Health | Than Aung | ||||
| Minister of Home Affairs | Lt. Gen. Ko Ko | ||||
| Minister of Hotels and Tourism | Htay Aung | ||||
| Minister of Immigration and Population | Khin Yi | ||||
| Minister of Industry | Maung Myint | ||||
| Minister of Information | Ye Htut | ||||
| Minister of Labor, Employment and Social Security | Aye Myint | ||||
| Minister of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development | Ohn Myint | ||||
| Minister of Mines | Myint Aung | ||||
| Minister of National Planning and Economic Development | Kan Zaw | ||||
| Minister of Rail Transport | Than Htay | ||||
| Minister of Religious Affairs | Soe Win | ||||
| Minister of Science and Technology | Ko Ko Oo | ||||
| Minister of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement | Myat Myat Ohn Khin | ||||
| Minister of Sports | Tint Hsan | ||||
| Minister of Transport | Nyan Tun Aung | ||||
| Minister of President's Office | Thein Nyunt | ||||
| Minister of President's Office | Soe Maung | ||||
| Minister of President's Office | Soe Thein | ||||
| Minister of President's Office | Aung Min | ||||
| Minister of President's Office | Hla Tun | ||||
| Minister of President's Office | Tin Naing Thein | ||||
| Union Auditor General | Thein Htaik | ||||
| Union Attorney-General | Tun Shin |
Cabinet dismissal and resignations (June–July 2014)
On 19 June 2014, Hsan Sint was dismissed from the office of Minister of Religious Affairs and brought to court for corruption. He is the first Minister dismissed openly. He was succeeded by Soe Win, Deputy Minister for Religious Affairs and former Deputy Minister for Ministry of Information. Minister for Information Aung Kyi and Minister for Health Pe Thet Khin were allowed to resign on 29 July 2014. They are succeeded by Ye Htut and Than Aung, Deputy Ministers.
Cabinet reshuffle (September 2012 – February 2013)
On 4 September 2012, Pyidaungsu Hluttaw approved the government's reshuffle of ministries, increasing the number to 36, including six ministers located in the President's Office. The President approved the resignation of Zaw Min, Union Minister for Electric Power-1, and Khin Maung Myint, Union Minister for Construction. The President also approved the resignation of Union Auditor-General Lun Maung on 28 August. Thein Hteik, Union Minister for Mines, was appointed as Union Auditor-General, and Lt-Gen Wai Lwin of the Office of Commander-in-Chief (Army) as Union Defence Minister. Wai Lwin was replaced Lt-Gen Hla Min, who was reassigned to the military. During the government's major cabinet reshuffle, nine ministers have been reassigned, mainly with four transferred to the President's Office and one, Aung Kyi, named as the new Minister for Information, replacing Kyaw Hsan, who was transferred to the Ministry of Cooperatives as minister. In the present reformation of the cabinet, Ministries of Electric Power No. 1 and 2 were combined into one as the Ministry of Electric Power, while the Ministry of Industrial Development was abolished.
On 16 January 2013, Minister for Communications and Information Technology, Thein Tun and Minister for Religious Affairs, Thura Myint Maung abruptly resigned. Thein Tun was the first government minister known to have been investigated for corruption under the new government. San Sint, Speaker of Ayeyarwady Region Hluttaw succeeded Thura Myint Maung later. On 13 February 2013, former Commander-in-Chief of air force, General Myat Hein become minister for Communications and Information Technology.
This appointments serve as a reminder that most ministers in the government are former officers who played a role in the previous military junta. Since taking office in 2011, the reformist president, who is himself a former general, has selected former senior military officers into government as it simply continues the flawed practices of past military rule, and given only a handful of posts to people without a military background.
| Office | Name |
|---|---|
| Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation | Myint Hlaing |
| Minister of Border Affairs | Thet Naing Win, Lt. Gen. |
| Minister of Commerce | Win Myint |
| Minister of Communications and Information Technology | Myat Hein |
| Minister of Construction | Kyaw Lwin |
| Minister of Cooperatives | Kyaw Hsan |
| Minister of Culture | Aye Myint Kyu |
| Minister of Defence | Lt. Gen. Wai Lwin |
| Minister of Education | Mya Aye |
| Minister of Electric Power | Khin Maung Soe |
| Minister of Energy | Than Htay |
| Minister of Finance | Win Shein |
| Minister of Foreign Affairs | Wunna Maung Lwin |
| Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry | Win Tun |
| Minister of Health | Pe Thet Khin |
| Minister of Home Affairs | Lt. Gen. Ko Ko |
| Minister of Hotels and Tourism | Htay Aung |
| Minister of Immigration and Population | Khin Yi |
| Minister of Industry | Aye Myint |
| Minister of Information | Aung Kyi |
| Minister of Labor, Employment and Social Security | Maung Myint |
| Minister of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development | Ohn Myint |
| Minister of Mines | Myint Aung |
| Minister of National Planning and Economic Development | Kan Zaw |
| Minister of Rail Transport | Zayar Aung |
| Minister of Religious Affairs | Hsan Sint |
| Minister of Science and Technology | Ko Ko Oo |
| Minister of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement | Myat Myat Ohn Khin |
| Minister of Sports | Tint Hsan |
| Minister of Transport | Nyan Tun Aung |
| Minister of President's Office | Thein Nyunt |
| Minister of President's Office | Soe Maung |
| Minister of President's Office | Soe Thein |
| Minister of President's Office | Aung Min |
| Minister of President's Office | Hla Tun |
| Minister of President's Office | Tin Naing Thein |
| Union Auditor General | Thein Htaik |
| Union Attorney-General | Tun Shin |
Inaugural Cabinet (March 2011)
The Cabinet was sworn in on 30 March 2011 at the Hluttaw complex in Naypyidaw, after being appointed by President Thein Sein. Four ministers, namely of the Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Home Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Border Affairs were nominated by Commander-in-Chief Than Shwe. Two ministries, the Ministry of the President's Office and the Ministry of Industrial Development were created by the Hluttaw (Parliament) on 9 February 2011.
The overwhelming majority of Ministers are Union Solidarity and Development Party members of parliament or military officers affiliated with the former State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), and four are civilians. 12 have previously held ministerial posts, while another 7 have held deputy ministerial posts during the SPDC administration. 3 are former regional army commanders. On 10 August 2011, the cabinet was reshuffled, with Kyaw Swa Khaing, previously the Minister of Industry No. 1 (with Minister of Industry No. 2, Soe Thein, concurrently becoming head of the Ministry of Industry-1), appointed as co-Minister of the President's Office.
| Ministry | Minister Name | Party | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ministry of Home Affairs | Ko Ko | Military | former SPDC Chief of the Bureau of Special Operations-3 |
| Ministry of Defence | Hla Min | Military | former SPDC Southern Command Commander |
| Ministry of Border Affairs | Thein Htay | Military | former SPDC Deputy Minister of Defence, Vice-Chief of Ordinance, and Chief of Military Ordinance |
| Ministry of Industrial Development | |||
| Ministry of Foreign Affairs | Wunna Maung Lwin | Military | former Ambassador to the United Nations (2007–2011) |
| Ministry of Information | Kyaw Hsan | Military | former SPDC Minister of Information and Brigadier General |
| Ministry of Culture | |||
| Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation | Myint Hlaing | USDP | former SPDC Northeast Command Commander and Air Force Chief of Staff |
| Ministry of Commerce | Wunna Kyawhtin Win Myint | USDP | former President of Union of the Myanmar Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry |
| Ministry of Construction | Khin Maung Myint | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Electric Power-2, Minister of Construction and Major General |
| Ministry of Hotels and Tourism | Tint Hsan | USDP | |
| Ministry of Sports | |||
| Ministry of Communications, Posts and Telegraphs | Thein Tun | USDP | former SPDC Deputy Minister for Communications, Posts and Telegraphs and Major General |
| Ministry of Finance and Revenue | Hla Tun | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Finance and Revenue and Major General |
| Ministry of Mines | Thein Htaik | USDP | former Lieutenant General |
| Ministry of Transport | Nyan Tun Aung | USDP | former SPDC Deputy Minister of Transport |
| Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development | Tin Naing Thein | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Livestock and Fisheries and Brigadier General |
| Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries | |||
| Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry | Win Tun | Military | former SPDC Minister of Forestry Director |
| Ministry of Labor | Aung Kyi | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Labor |
| Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement | |||
| Ministry of Cooperatives | Ohn Myint | USDP | former SPDC Bureau of Special Operations-6, Northern Command Commander and Lieutenant General |
| Ministry of Industry | Soe Thein | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Industry-2 and Lieutenant-General |
| Ministry of Energy | Than Htay | USDP | former SPDC Deputy Minister of Energy |
| Ministry of Rail Transportation | Aung Min | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Rail Transportation |
| Ministry of Education | Mya Aye | – | former rector of the Mandalay University |
| Ministry of Religious Affairs | Myint Maung | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Religious Affairs |
| Ministry of Immigration and Population | Khin Yi | Military | former SPDC Brigadier General, Chief of National Police, and SPDC Deputy Minister of Home Affairs |
| Ministry of Electric Power-1 | Zaw Min | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Electric Power-1 and Colonel |
| Ministry of Electric Power-2 | Khin Maung Soe | – | former Chairman of the Yangon City Electric Power Supply Board |
| Ministry of Science and Technology | Aye Myint | USDP | former SPDC Minister of Sports, Deputy Minister of Defence, and Major General |
| Ministry of President's Office | Soe Maung | ||
| Thein Nyunt | |||
| Kyaw Swa Khaing | USDP | ||
| USDP | |||
| USDP | former Lieutenant General, Judge Advocate General, and Military Judge General | ||
| former SPDC Minister of Progress of Border Areas, National Races and Development Affairs and Mayor of Naypyidaw (2006–2011) | |||
| SPDC Deputy Minister of Industry-2 and General | |||
| Ministry of Health | Pe Thet Khin | – | Former rector at University of Medicine 1, Yangon |
Soe Win's Cabinet
First Cabinet reshuffle (May 2006)
On 15 May 2006 the cabinet was reshuffled. The changes were:{{cite web |access-date=24 February 2012}}
| Ministry | Changes |
|---|---|
| Culture | Major-General Kyi Aung retired |
| Major-General Khin Aung Myint appointed | |
| Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement and | |
| Immigration and Population | Major-General Sein Htwa retired |
| Major-General Maung Maung Swe appointed | |
| Hotels and Tourism | Major-General Soe Naing appointed |
| Electric Power | Major-General Tin Htut reassigned |
| Divided into two Ministries | |
| Electric Power-1 | Colonel Zaw Min appointed |
| Electric Power-2 | Major-General Khin Maung Myint appointed |
| Cooperative | Colonel Zaw Min reassigned |
| Major-General Tin Htut appointed |
Than Shwe's Cabinet
Second Cabinet reshuffle (September 2002)
On 14 September 2002 a minor cabinet reshuffle was reported:{{cite web |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021031114436/http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2002-09/14/content_561351.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=31 October 2002 |access-date=24 February 2012}}
| Ministry | Changes |
|---|---|
| Information | Major-General Kyi Aung reassigned |
| Brigadier-General Kyaw Hsan appointed | |
| Culture | Minister of Labor Tin Win, concurrently Minister of Culture since November 2001, relieved |
| Major-General Kyi Aung appointed | |
| Hotels and Tourism | Major-General Saw Lwin dismissed |
| Minister of Communications, Posts and Telegraphs Brigadier-General Thein Zaw assigned concurrently | |
| Prime Minister's Office | Major-General Tin Ngwe dismissed |
Second Cabinet (October 1999)
On 30 October 1999, the State Peace and Development Council issued a proclamation replacing Ohn Gyaw with Win Aung, the Burmese ambassador to the United Kingdom.
| Office | Minister |
|---|---|
| Ministry of Sports | Aung Khin |
| Ministry of Commerce | Pyi Son |
| Ministry of Social Welfare | Sein Htwa |
| Ministry of Religious Affairs | Aye Myint |
Second Cabinet (November 1998)
On 14 November 1998, the State Peace and Development Council issued a proclamation replacing Ohn Gyaw with Win Aung, the Burmese ambassador to the United Kingdom.
| Office | Predecessor | Successor | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deputy Prime Minister | |||
| Ministry of Foreign Affairs | Ohn Gyaw | ||
| Minister of the Prime Minister's Office | |||
| Minister of Transport | |||
| Ministry of Industry-2 |
Second Cabinet (December 1997)
On 21 December 1997, the State Peace and Development Council announced a cabinet reshuffle:
| Office | Minister |
|---|---|
| Office of the Chairman of the SPDC | David Abel |
| Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development | Soe Tha |
| Ministry of Finance | Khin Maung Thein |
| Ministry of Communications, Posts and Telegraphs | |
| Ministry of Finance and Revenue | |
| Ministry of Energy |
Second Cabinet (November 1997)
On 15 November 1997 the State Peace and Development Council issued a proclamation naming the Prime Minister, Deputy Prime Ministers and Ministers in the government. They were:{{cite web |access-date=24 February 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120305112836/http://missions.itu.int/~myanmar/law/spdcp297.htm |archive-date=5 March 2012
| Office | Minister |
|---|---|
| Prime Minister | Senior General Than Shwe |
| Deputy Prime Minister | Rear-Admiral Maung Maung Khin |
| Deputy Prime Minister | Lieutenant General Tin Tun |
| Ministry of Defence | Senior General Than Shwe |
| Ministry of Military Affairs | Lieutenant General Tin Hla |
| Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation | Major General Nyunt Tin |
| Ministry of Industry-1 | U Aung Thaung |
| Ministry of Industry-2 | Major General Hla Myint Swe |
| Ministry of Foreign Affairs | U Ohn Gyaw |
| Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development | Brigadier General David Abel |
| Ministry of Transport | Lieutenant General Tin Ngwe |
| Ministry of Labour | Vice-Admiral Tin Aye |
| Ministry of Co-operatives | U Than Aung |
| Ministry of Rail Transportation | U Win Sein |
| Ministry of Energy | U Khin Maung Thein |
| Ministry of Education | U Pan Aung |
| Ministry of Health | Major General Ket Sein |
| Ministry of Trade & Commerce | Major General Kyaw Than |
| Ministry of Hotels & Tourism | Major General Saw Lwin |
| Ministry of Communications, Posts & Telegraphs | U Soe Tha |
| Ministry of Finance & Revenue | Brigadier-General Win Tin |
| Ministry of Religious Affairs | Major General Sein Htwa |
| Ministry of Construction | Major General Saw Tun |
| Ministry of Science & Technology | U Thaung |
| Ministry of Culture | U Aung San |
| Ministry of Immigration & Population | U Saw Tun |
| Ministry of Information | Major General Kyi Aung |
| Ministry of Progress of Border Areas & National Races and Development Affairs | Colonel Thein Nyunt |
| Ministry of Electric Power | Major General Tin Htut |
| Ministry of Sports | Brigadier-General Sein Win |
| Ministry of Forestry | U Aung Phone |
| Ministry of Home Affairs | Colonel Tin Hlaing |
| Ministry of Mines | Brigadier-General Ohn Myint |
| Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief & Resettlement | Brigadier-General Pyi Sone |
| Ministry of Livestock Breeding & Fisheries | Brigadier-General Maung Maung Thein |
| Office of The Chairman of The State Peace and Development Council | Lieutenant General Min Thein |
| Office of The Chairman of The State Peace and Development Council | Brigadier-General Maung Maung |
| Office of The Prime Minister | Brigadier-General Lun Maung |
| Office of The Prime Minister | U Than Shwe |
| Office of The Prime Minister | Major General Tin Ngwe |
First Cabinet reshuffle (17 June 1995)
On 17 June 1995 the cabinet was reshuffled, increasing the cabinet size and the number of military people with ministerial positions:{{cite web |access-date=25 February 2012}}
| Ministry | Changes |
|---|---|
| Construction | Khin Maung Yin reassigned to Deputy Prime Minister's office |
| Major-General Saw Tun assigned | |
| Light industry | Than Shwe reassigned to Prime Minister's office |
| Major-General Kyaw Than assigned | |
| Immigration and population | New ministry: Lieutenant-General Maung Hla appointed |
| Information | Brigadier-General Myo Thant reassigned to SLORC Chairman's office |
| Major-General Aye Kyaw assigned | |
| Social welfare, relief and resettlement | Major-General Soe Myin assigned |
| SLORC Chairman's office | Lieutenant-General Min Thein assigned as a minister |
The outgoing Minister of Social welfare, relief and resettlement was appointed Minister of Culture, and the Minister of Culture was reassigned to the security management committee.
Notes
References
References
- [http://www.burmalibrary.org/docs5/Myanmar_Constitution-2008-en.pdf "Constitution of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar (2008)"] full text in English from ''Burma Library'', last accessed 5 October 2010
- (1 February 2021). "Office of Commander-in-Chief of Defence Services Order No (6/2021)". Global New Light of Myanmar.
- (February 2021). "Tatmadaw names new govt officials".
- (2 February 2021). "Myanmar Military Appoints Ex-Generals, USDP Members to New Govt".
- (2 February 2023). "Myanmar Junta Reshuffles Governing Body". [[The Irrawaddy]].
- (30 March 2018). "ပြည်ထောင်စုအစိုးရပြင်ဆင်ခြင်း". Myanmar President Office.
- Holmes, Oliver. (22 March 2016). "Aung San Suu Kyi to hold ministry in Myanmar's government". The Guardian.
- (13 August 2015). "Top ministers resign". Eleven.
- link
- (27 June 2014). "MPs agree on religious affairs minister replacement". Ei Ei Toe Lwin.
- (29 July 2014). "Myanmar information and health ministers step down". [[Associated Press]].
- (31 July 2014). "Who is Ye Htut?". The Nation.
- "Thein Sein proposes to scrap ministries".
- (27 August 2012). "BBC News – Burma president announces cabinet reshuffle". Bbc.co.uk.
- (5 September 2012). "Parliament approves ministry realignments".
- Latt, Win Ko Ko. (11 February 2013). "Air Force boss to take over telecoms". The Myanmar Times.
- Nyein, Nyein. (14 February 2013). "Former Generals to Run Burma's Telecoms, Border Affairs Ministries". The Irrawaddy.
- Wai Moe. (29 March 2011). "Thein Sein and Cabinet Scheduled to be Sworn in on Wednesday". The Irrawaddy.
- Ahunt Phone Myat. (9 February 2011). "Major government overhaul underway". Democratic Voice of Burma.
- (9 February 2011). "Correction: Myanmar President Forms 30-member Cabinet". RTT News.
- Thein Sein. (10 August 2011). "Union Minister Reshuffled". New Light of Myanmar.
- (10 August 2011). "REGIME WATCH > CABINET". Alternative Asean Network on Burma.
- (30 October 1999). "Cabinet reshuffle in Burma".
- (14 November 1998). "Myanmar announces cabinet reshuffle".
- (15 November 1998). "Myanmar cabinet changes aim to polish image".
- (21 December 1997). "Burma Cabinet Change Aims Govt Image".
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