Final phase of Myanmar's election underway, military-backed party set to win
The military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party is set to secure a dominant parliamentary majority amid low turnout and ongoing civil conflict, critics say the election legitimizes military rule.
- On Sunday, Myanmar held the final round of a three-stage general election, capping a monthlong vote with the Union Solidarity and Development Party leading early results.
- Critics say the polls are neither free nor fair and aim to legitimize military power after the February 1, 2021 coup that sidelined Aung San Suu Kyi and the National League for Democracy.
- Voting opened at 6 a.m. in 61 townships across six regions and three states, while security gaps left 67 townships without voting, reducing the 664-member national parliament to 586 seats.
- The combined parliament will pick the president, and Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing is widely expected to assume the role when Parliament convenes in March and the new government takes office in April.
- International observers were mainly from states viewed as authoritarian, and critics faced new legal penalties as authorities charged more than 400 people recently under the Election Protection Law.
127 Articles
127 Articles
Myanmar's main pro-military party claimed victory in the junta's parliamentary elections on Monday.
Myanmar junta wraps poll with ally set to seal victory
Voting concluded in Myanmar's month-long election on Sunday, with the dominant pro-military party on course for landslide victory in a junta-run poll critics say will only prolong the army's grip on power. The Southeast Asian nation has a long history of military rule, but the generals took a back seat for a decade of civilian-led reforms. That ended in a 2021 military coup when democratic figurehead Aung San Suu Kyi was detained, civil war brok…
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