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List of deputy prime ministers of Myanmar

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This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Myanmar

This article lists the deputy prime ministers of Myanmar (also known as Burma) since the Burmese Declaration of Independence in 1948.

Deputy prime ministers of Burma/Myanmar (1948–present)[edit]

(Dates in italics indicate de facto continuation of office)

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term of office Political party
Took office Left office Time in office

Union of Burma (1948–1974)[edit]

style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" | 1 Bo Let Ya
ဗိုလ်လက်ျာ
(1911–1978)
4 January 1948 14 September 1948 254 days Military
style="background-color:Template:Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League/meta/color;" width=10px | ;" | 2 Kyaw Nyein
ကျော်ငြိမ်း
(1913–1986)
14 September 1948 2 April 1949 200 days Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League
style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" | 3 Ne Win
နေဝင်း
(1911–2002)
2 April 1949 10 December 1949 252 days Military
style="background-color:#DDDDDD;" width=10px | ;" | 4 Sao Hkun Hkio
စဝ်ခွန်ချို
(1912–1990)
10 December 1949 29 October 1958[lower-alpha 1] 8 years, 323 days Independent
style="background-color:#DDDDDD;" width=10px | ;" | 5 Thein Maung
သိမ်း​မောင်
(1890-1975)
29 October 1958 27 February 1959 121 days Independent
style="background-color:#DDDDDD;" width=10px | ;" | 6 Lun Baw
လွန်း​ဘော်
27 February 1959 4 April 1960[lower-alpha 2] 1 year, 37 days Independent
style="background-color:#DDDDDD;" width=10px | ;" | (4) Sao Hkun Hkio
စဝ်ခွန်ချို
(1912–1990)
4 April 1960 2 March 1962
(deposed.)
1 year, 335 days Independent
Position abolished (2 March 1962 – 2 March 1974 )

Socialist Republic of Union of Burma (1974–1988)[edit]

style="background-color:Template:Burma Socialist Programme Party/meta/color;" width=10px | ;" | 7 U Lwin
ဦးလွင်
(1924–2011)
2 March 1974[1] 29 March 1977 3 years, 27 days Burma Socialist Programme Party
style="background-color:Template:Burma Socialist Programme Party/meta/color;" width=10px | ;" | 8 Tun Tin
ထွန်းတင်
(1920–2020)
29 March 1977 26 July 1988
(resigned.)
11 years, 119 days Burma Socialist Programme Party
style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" height=100 | Thura Kyaw Htin
သူရ​ကျော်ထင်
(1925-1996)
9 November 1981 18 September 1988
(resigned.)
6 years, 314 days Military
(until 4 November 1985)
Burma Socialist  Programme  Party
(from 4 November 1985)
9
style="background-color:Template:Burma Socialist Programme Party/meta/color;" width=10px | ;" height=100 |

Union of Burma /Myanmar (1988–2011)[edit]

style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" | 10 Than Shwe
သန်းရွှေ
(born 1933)
21 September 1988 23 April 1992 3 years, 215 days Military
style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" | 11 Khin Maung Yin
ခင်မောင်ရင်
17 July 1995.[2] 15 November 1997 2 years, 121 days Military
style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" | 12(a) Maung Maung Khin
မောင်​မောင်ခင်
15 November 1997[3] 25 August 2003 5 years, 283 days Military
style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" | 12(b) Tin Tun
တင်ထွန်း
15 November 1997[4] 25 August 2003 5 years, 283 days Military
style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" | 13 Tin Hla
တင်လှ
(born 1939)
14 November 1998 14 November 2001 3 years, 0 days Military
Position abolished (25 August 2003 – 30 March 2011)

Republic of the Union of Myanmar (2011–present)[edit]

Position abolished (30 March 2011 – 1 August 2021)
style="background-color:#C3B091;" width=10px | ;" | 14 Soe Win
စိုးဝင်း
(born 1960)
1 August 2021 Incumbent 2 years, 357 days Military

Notes[edit]

  1. Handed over power to the military.
  2. Handed back power to the civilian government after the 1960 general election.

References[edit]

  1. Aung San, Suu Kyi (25 March 1996). "Letter from Burma No. 18". Mainichi Daily News.
  2. "SLORC CABINET RESHUFFLES". SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST. 17 June 1995. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  3. "The State Peace and Development Council Proclamation (Proclamation No. 2/97)". 15 November 1997. Archived from the original on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2012. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  4. "The State Peace and Development Council Proclamation (Proclamation No. 2/97)". 15 November 1997. Archived from the original on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2012. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)



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