Myanmar opposition claims big gains in election
Supporters of Aung San Suu Kyi's party celebrate as partial results suggest it could wrest power from military.
Supporters of Aung San Suu Kyi's party celebrate as partial results suggest it could wrest power from military.
Ted Regencia | 09 Nov 2015 AJ
Supporters of the opposition NLD celebrate as partial results come in [Ted Regencia/Al Jazeera] |
Even with a win for her party, Suu Kyi cannot become president, according to the country’s constitution as she married a UK citizen and her children have UK passports.
Yangon,
Myanmar - Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi's party is claiming gains
in Myanmar's parliamentary election, with supporters already celebrating
an anticipated landslide victory.
At
least 2,000 people braved the afternoon downpour on Monday in the
commercial capital, Yangon, as they awaited the announcement of the
results and a possible speech by the democracy icon.
Supporters
waved the red flag of the Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD)
party while singing along the campaign theme song, shouting "NLD, we
will win."
Aung San Suu Kyi has been campaigning for reform since she was released from house arrest in 2010 [Ted Regencia/Al Jazeera] |
They
also cheered when the election commission announced wins for NLD
candidates in a news conference which played live on a widescreen TV.
"I'm very excited. NLD won in my township of Kyi Myin Dine," said Daw Khin Myo Sett, 39, who voted for the first time.
"I hope that they will improve education as well as healthcare and give my children a better life."
The country's first openly contested election in decades saw an estimated 80 percent voter turnout.
The NLD had won about 70 percent of the votes counted by midday Monday, party spokesman Win Htein said.
Smooth voting
The
nation breathed a collective sigh of relief as polling closed on
Sunday, with no major incidents of violence or voter irregularity
reported.
The
opposition NLD party, however, filed an official complaint before the
election commission about violations of voting regulations.
The
chairman of the election commission, U Tin Aye, said 48 cases of
irregularities had been registered, including allegations of errors in
the voter list and flaws in advance voting.
Initial
results showed the NLD winning seats in its stronghold of Yangon, and
even in the capital Naypyidaw, where the ruling Union Solidarity and
Development Party (USDP) was expected to win.
Suu Kyi called for the country to remain "calm, peaceful and stable" as it awaits the outcome of the election.
Myanmar votes in first openly contested poll in decades
"There
is no official result yet. But the people already know who has won,"
she told her supporters outside the NLD headquarters on Monday morning.
"It doesn't matter if you win or lose, but your dignity is important. The winner should show empathy to the losers."
The election commission said it would announce the poll result at 6pm local time (11:30 GMT).
There
were indications of a strong victory for the opposition, with senior
ruling party candidates losing their parliamentary seats, including Shwe
Mann, the lower house speaker.
On
Monday morning, Shwe Mann posted a statement on his official Facebook
page congratulating his opponent, U Than Nyunt of the NLD.
Before the election, Shwe Mann was one of the candidates tipped to become a presidential nominee.
The
USDP reportedly won in districts in the northern Kachin and Shan
states, as well as in Meiktila township, which is heavily populated by
military.
A government newspaper on Monday hailed the election as the "dawn of a new era".
Min Aung Hlaing, a senior general, was also quoted as saying that there is "no reason not to accept" the election results.
The
military government handed power to a semi-civilian government in 2011,
but the army still dominates politics after decades in power.
Twenty-five percent of seats in parliament will be reserved for the army.
Even
with a win for her party, Suu Kyi cannot become president, according to
the country’s constitution as she married a UK citizen and her children
have UK passports.
Sunday's poll was the first openly contested in Myanmar in 25 years.
However,
voting did not take place in hundreds of villages following fighting
between armed ethnic armies and government soldiers.
And about 1.3 million Rohingya Muslims, considered illegal immigrants by the government, were not allowed to vote.
Maung Win, a Muslim in Yangon, said he voted for the NLD.
"I
think that Aung San Suu Kyi will not only be good to the Muslim
community, but also the country as a whole," he told Al Jazeera.
No comments:
Post a Comment