NAYPYIDAW, April 2 — Myanmar’s parliament will ‌hold a bicameral vote to elect a president tomorrow, house speaker Aung Lin Dwe said today, ‌with the country’s former military chief and junta leader Min Aung Hlaing in the running for the position.

The 69-year-old general, who led a 2021 coup that ousted the democratically elected government of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and triggered a civil war, stepped down as Myanmar’s top military commander on Monday, after 15 years in the ‌position.

On the same day, a member of ⁠Myanmar’s lower house of parliament ⁠nominated him as a vice ⁠presidential candidate, alongside two other ⁠contenders put ⁠forward by the upper house and a block of military representatives in parliament.

A joint meeting ⁠of both houses, including the military-appointed lawmakers, will be held at 10am local time (0330 GMT/11.30am Malaysian time) tomorrow to elect a president from among those three vice presidential candidates.

“The three candidates selected ⁠by their respective groups meet the necessary qualifications,” Aung Lin Dwe said, according to parliamentary proceedings broadcast ⁠on state media.

The move follows a controversial election ⁠held ⁠in December and January that was won by a military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party but widely derided as ‌a sham by the United Nations and many Western countries. — Reuters