Berliner Boersenzeitung - Myanmar junta wraps election with ally set to seal victory

EUR -
AED 4.26336
AFN 72.539743
ALL 95.969597
AMD 436.761633
ANG 2.078085
AOA 1064.533294
ARS 1622.239954
AUD 1.665755
AWG 2.092209
AZN 1.969529
BAM 1.955155
BBD 2.333461
BDT 142.163126
BGN 1.984315
BHD 0.438291
BIF 3440.935805
BMD 1.160887
BND 1.482398
BOB 8.023389
BRL 6.057509
BSD 1.158533
BTN 108.556609
BWP 15.874697
BYN 3.429869
BYR 22753.389691
BZD 2.330162
CAD 1.601177
CDF 2643.919879
CHF 0.915354
CLF 0.026906
CLP 1062.339221
CNY 8.001646
CNH 8.006409
COP 4301.342579
CRC 539.805739
CUC 1.160887
CUP 30.763512
CVE 110.230079
CZK 24.422339
DJF 206.314639
DKK 7.471476
DOP 69.405023
DZD 153.81363
EGP 61.066959
ERN 17.413308
ETB 179.100647
FJD 2.600677
FKP 0.867445
GBP 0.864925
GEL 3.140219
GGP 0.867445
GHS 12.657881
GIP 0.867445
GMD 85.321598
GNF 10154.564337
GTQ 8.872189
GYD 242.46692
HKD 9.074133
HNL 30.67796
HRK 7.537175
HTG 151.908604
HUF 389.104442
IDR 19589.971991
ILS 3.616338
IMP 0.867445
INR 109.019845
IQD 1517.69958
IRR 1524273.954377
ISK 143.799761
JEP 0.867445
JMD 182.824207
JOD 0.823051
JPY 184.365141
KES 150.462767
KGS 101.518661
KHR 4649.426928
KMF 494.537784
KPW 1044.815161
KRW 1737.721097
KWD 0.355777
KYD 0.965482
KZT 559.295588
LAK 24943.775471
LBP 103754.689722
LKR 364.169925
LRD 212.602647
LSL 19.751088
LTL 3.427798
LVL 0.702209
LYD 7.38666
MAD 10.800599
MDL 20.263319
MGA 4837.30086
MKD 61.648395
MMK 2438.057732
MNT 4143.749921
MOP 9.336622
MRU 46.206372
MUR 53.934929
MVR 17.946995
MWK 2008.89436
MXN 20.584621
MYR 4.602915
MZN 74.19248
NAD 19.751088
NGN 1599.354434
NIO 42.635575
NOK 11.294841
NPR 173.683496
NZD 1.992756
OMR 0.446361
PAB 1.158523
PEN 4.007379
PGK 5.003307
PHP 69.633526
PKR 323.679158
PLN 4.267218
PYG 7559.605105
QAR 4.224862
RON 5.094906
RSD 117.448079
RUB 93.885915
RWF 1694.890056
SAR 4.354847
SBD 9.335826
SCR 15.98465
SDG 697.693459
SEK 10.763046
SGD 1.483788
SHP 0.870966
SLE 28.553338
SLL 24343.237318
SOS 662.061742
SRD 43.347429
STD 24028.021821
STN 24.491714
SVC 10.137657
SYP 128.798415
SZL 19.749403
THB 37.717178
TJS 11.116578
TMT 4.074714
TND 3.398223
TOP 2.795137
TRY 51.494061
TTD 7.871405
TWD 37.026486
TZS 2983.548704
UAH 50.880828
UGX 4338.513435
USD 1.160887
UYU 47.215042
UZS 14134.339587
VES 532.705795
VND 30589.378487
VUV 138.735394
WST 3.178743
XAF 655.726671
XAG 0.015845
XAU 0.000253
XCD 3.137356
XCG 2.088012
XDR 0.815514
XOF 655.749258
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.985155
ZAR 19.558738
ZMK 10449.374887
ZMW 21.926054
ZWL 373.805214
  • RIO

    1.0900

    87.86

    +1.24%

  • BTI

    0.5450

    58.305

    +0.93%

  • CMSC

    -0.0190

    22.851

    -0.08%

  • BCC

    0.2950

    73.865

    +0.4%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    25.77

    -0.23%

  • NGG

    1.6600

    83.99

    +1.98%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    14.76

    +0.68%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • JRI

    0.2600

    12.12

    +2.15%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    32.32

    -0.43%

  • BP

    0.5150

    45.305

    +1.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    16

    +2.5%

  • AZN

    1.6650

    187.445

    +0.89%

  • GSK

    1.4850

    54.435

    +2.73%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    22.79

    +0.7%

Myanmar junta wraps election with ally set to seal victory

Myanmar junta wraps election 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.

Text size:

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 broke out, and the country descended into humanitarian crisis.

The election's third and final phase closed after voting took place in dozens of constituencies across the country, just a week shy of the coup's five-year anniversary.

The military pledges the election will return power to the people but with Suu Kyi sidelined and her hugely popular party dissolved, democracy advocates say the ballot is stacked with military allies.

Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing -- who has not ruled out serving as president after the poll -- toured voting stations in Mandalay, wearing civilian dress.

"This is the path chosen by the people," he told reporters in response to a question from AFP. "The people from Myanmar can support whoever they want to support."

Voting is not being held in rebel-held parts of the country, and in junta-controlled areas rights monitors say the run-up has been characterised by coercion and the crushing of dissent.

Teacher Zaw Ko Ko Myint cast his vote at a Mandalay high school around dawn.

"Although I do not expect much, we want to see a better country," the 53-year-old told AFP. "I feel relieved after voting, as if I fulfilled my duty."

- 'Fabricated vote' -

The Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) -- packed with retired officers and described by analysts as a military puppet -- won more than 85 percent of elected lower house seats and two-thirds of those in the upper house in the poll's first two phases.

"States that endorse the results of these polls will be complicit in the junta's attempt to legitimise military rule through a fabricated vote," UN rights expert Tom Andrews said in a statement Friday.

Official results are expected late this week.

A military-drafted constitution also gives the armed forces a quarter of the seats in both houses of parliament, which will vote as a whole to pick the president.

"I don't expect anything from this election," a 34-year-old Yangon resident told AFP earlier, requesting anonymity for security reasons. "Things will just keep dragging on."

Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party thrashed the USDP in the last elections in 2020, before the military seized power on February 1, 2021, making unfounded allegations of widespread vote-rigging.

The 80-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate remains detained incommunicado at an unknown location on charges rights monitors dismiss as politically motivated.

- 'Not safe at all' -

The military has long presented itself as the only force guarding restive Myanmar from rupture and ruin.

But its putsch tipped the country into full-blown civil war, with pro-democracy guerrillas fighting the junta alongside a kaleidoscope of ethnic minority armies which have long held sway in the fringes.

Air strikes are frequent in some regions, others enjoy relative peace, while some zones are blockaded, haunted by the spectre of starvation.

Polling was called off in one in five lower house constituencies, but some frontline locations went to the polls Sunday.

"Candidates still haven't held any campaigning because of security," complained one parliamentary candidate, speaking on condition of anonymity for security reasons. "It's not safe at all to travel."

There is no official death toll for Myanmar's civil war.

But monitoring group ACLED, which tallies media reports of violence, estimates more than 90,000 have been killed on all sides.

Meanwhile, more than 400 people have been pursued for prosecution under stark new legislation forbidding "disruption" of the election and punishing protest or criticism with up to a decade in prison.

Turnout in the first and second phases of the vote was just over 50 percent, official figures say, compared to roughly 70 percent in 2020.

(A.Berg--BBZ)