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List of prime ministers of Myanmar

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Portrait of U Nu (1962)
Ne Win at Jerusalem (1959)
Theun Sein pictured (2013)
Judiciary
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This article lists theprime ministers ofMyanmar (also known as Burma) since theBurmese Declaration of Independence in 1948.

Titles

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List of officeholders

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Political parties
  Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League (AFPFL)
  Union Party (Clean AFPFL)
  Burma Socialist Programme Party (BSPP)
  Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP)
Other affiliations
  Military
No.PortraitName
(Lifespan)
Term of officePolitical partyRef.
StartEndDuration

Union of Burma (1948–1974)

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1U Nu
ဦးနု
(1907–1995)
4 January 194812 June 1956
(Resigned)
8 years, 160 daysAnti-Fascist People's Freedom League
2Ba Swe
ဘဆွေ
(1915–1987)
12 June 19561 March 1957262 daysAnti-Fascist People's Freedom League
(1)U Nu
ဦးနု
(1907–1995)
1 March 195729 October 1958[a]1 year, 242 daysAnti-Fascist People's Freedom League
3Ne Win
နေဝင်း
(1911–2002)
29 October 19584 April 1960[b]1 year, 158 daysMilitary
(1)U Nu
ဦးနု
(1907–1995)
4 April 19602 March 1962
(Deposed in a coup)
1 year, 332 daysUnion Party
(Clean Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League)
(3)Ne Win
နေဝင်း
(1911–2002)
2 March 19624 March 197412 years, 2 daysMilitary /
Burma Socialist Programme Party

Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma (1974–1988)

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4Sein Win
စိန်ဝင်း
(1919–1993)
4 March 197429 March 1977[c]3 years, 25 daysBurma Socialist Programme Party
5Maung Maung Kha
မောင်မောင်ခ
(1920–1995)
29 March 197726 July 1988
(Resigned)
11 years, 119 daysBurma Socialist Programme Party
6Tun Tin
ထွန်းတင်
(1920–2020)
26 July 198818 September 1988
(Deposed in a coup)
54 daysBurma Socialist Programme Party[1]

Union of Burma / Myanmar (1988–2011)

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7Saw Maung
စောမောင်
(1928–1997)
21 September 198823 April 1992
(Deposed)[d]
3 years, 215 daysMilitary[2][3][4]
8Than Shwe
သန်းရွှေ
(born 1933)
23 April 199225 August 200311 years, 124 daysMilitary /
Union Solidarity and Development Association
9Khin Nyunt
ခင်ညွန့်
(born 1939)
25 August 200318 October 2004
(Deposed)
1 year, 54 daysMilitary /
Union Solidarity and Development Association
[5]
10Soe Win
စိုးဝင်း
(1947–2007)
19 October 200412 October 2007
(Died in office)
2 years, 358 daysMilitary /
Union Solidarity and Development Association
[6]
11Thein Sein
သိန်းစိန်
(born 1944)
12 October 20077 November 20103 years, 26 daysMilitary /
Union Solidarity and Development Association
(until 29 April 2010)
[7]
Union Solidarity and Development Party
(from 8 June 2010)
Position vacant (7 November 2010 – 30 March 2011)

Republic of the Union of Myanmar (2011–present)

[edit]
Position abolished (30 March 2011 – 1 August 2021)
12Min Aung Hlaing
မင်းအောင်လှိုင်
(born 1956)
1 August 202131 July 20253 years, 364 daysMilitary[8][9]
13Nyo Saw
ညိုစော
(born ?)
31 July 2025Incumbent116 daysIndependent[10]

Timeline

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Handed over power to themilitary.
  2. ^Handed back power to the civilian government after the1960 general election.
  3. ^Removed from office due to theeconomic problems of the country.
  4. ^Resigned for health reasons,de facto deposed by rival generals.

References

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  1. ^"Burmese Military Officially Takes Reins Of Power".The New York Times. 19 September 1988.
  2. ^"Burmese Military Ousts Chief, Citing Illness".The New York Times. 24 April 1992.
  3. ^"Saw Maung Is Dead at 68; Led a Brutal Burmese Coup".The New York Times. 27 July 1997.
  4. ^Wheeler, Ned (28 July 1997)."Obituary: General Saw Maung".The Independent. London.
  5. ^"Burma's prime minister 'arrested'".BBC News. 19 October 2004.
  6. ^"Burma prime minister Soe Win dies".BBC News. 12 October 2007.
  7. ^Wai Moe (5 May 2010)."Tight Censorship on Reporting USDP".The Irrawaddy.Archived from the original on 2 March 2011. Retrieved22 August 2011.
  8. ^"Myanmar military leader takes new title of prime minister in caretaker government – state media".Reuters. 1 August 2021.Archived from the original on 1 August 2021. Retrieved1 August 2021.
  9. ^"Myanmar army ruler takes prime minister role, again pledges elections".Reuters. 1 August 2021.Archived from the original on 1 August 2021. Retrieved1 August 2021.
  10. ^"Myanmar junta lifts emergency rules, paving way for elections".The Straits Times. 31 July 2025.ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved31 July 2025.

External links

[edit]
Union of Burma
(1948–1962)
Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma
(1962–1988)
Union of Burma / Myanmar
(1988–2011)
Republic of the Union of Myanmar
(2011–present)
  • † indicate military officeholders.
Myanmar is also known asBurma
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