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Myanmar goes to polls for by-elections, in first vote since Suu Kyi swept to power


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Myanmar goes to polls for by-elections, in first vote since Suu Kyi swept to power

By Simon Lewis and Wa Lone

 

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Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi returns after giving a speech to her supporters during the election campaign at Kawhmu Township March 22, 2012. REUTERS/Staff/Files

 

YANGON (Reuters) - Myanmar goes to the polls on Saturday for the first time since Aung San Suu Kyi's party swept to power a year ago, in an early indication of views on her leadership amid increased fighting with armed ethnic groups and slower economic growth.

 

The by-elections will fill 19 vacant seats in the national and regional parliaments at a time when Suu Kyi is struggling to match the sky-high expectations that swept her National League for Democracy (NLD) to victory.

 

In a televised address earlier this week, Suu Kyi acknowledged the public's frustration with the slow pace of reforms and development.

 

But she also reiterated her top priority of ending the ethnic conflicts that have kept Myanmar in a state of near-perpetual civil war.

 

While the outcome of the by-elections will not affect the balance of power within the parliament where the NLD enjoys a large majority, it offers a chance to gauge the popularity of the administration in a country where nationwide public polls are not available.

 

Win Htein, one of the NLD's top leaders, said the party faced language barriers and problems with armed groups in the Shan state districts being contested. Fighting in some of those areas has intensified in recent months.

 

"We are still improving in Shan state. The local people don't understand Burmese, so we have to translate our policies into the Shan language," he said.

 

Major rebel armies engaged in clashes with the military in areas including the Shan state have refused to actively participate in Suu Kyi's peace process.

 

Several conflicts have reignited since Suu Kyi took office, displacing an estimated 160,000 more people, according to the United Nations.

 

Over two million voters, less than five percent of the country's population, can vote in the by-elections where seats in eight states and regions across the country are up for grabs.

 

"We still accept the NLD government after one year. They are governing smoothly," said Victor Hla Sein, a 73-year-old from Myanmar's commercial hub Yangon.

 

Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi is also facing international criticism for her government's handling of a crisis in the Muslim-majority Rakhine region, where soldiers have blocked access for aid workers and are accused of raping and killing civilians.

 

The by-elections will fill seats largely vacated by incumbents who joined the government in ministerial posts. Some seats that were excluded from previous elections due to fighting with ethnic armed groups are also up for grabs.

 

The Union Election Commission is expected to announce official results late on Saturday.

 

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-04-01
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16 hours ago, rooster59 said:

soldiers have blocked access for aid workers and are accused of raping and killing civilians.

Unfortunately, Suu Kyi has no control over the military any more than elected Thai officials do over the Thai military. If the Myanmar military believes that Suu Kyi's policies are too liberal to the extent that they weaken the military's control of the country, her regime will face a coup deja vu Thailand. Western criticism of Kyi's government needs to be moderated from that perspective.

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