Burma’s opposition party was heading for a landslide victory in the country’s elections as leader Aung San Suu Kyi urged supporters not to provoke losing rivals who mostly represent the former junta that ruled for half a century.
The opposition National League of Democracy had won about 70 per cent of the votes counted by midday on Monday, party spokesman Win Htein said.
The comments, if confirmed by official results, indicate that Ms Suu Kyi’s party would not only dominate the parliament but could also secure the presidency despite handicaps built into the constitution.
“We will win a landslide,” Nyan Win, another party spokesman, told the Associated Press.
“I want Mother Suu to win in this election,” said Ma Khine, a street vendor, referring to the 70-year-old with an affectionate term many use. “She has the skill to lead the country. I respect her so much. I love her. She will change our country in a very good way.”
The government election commission was expected to start announcing final results on Monday evening. The NLD has been widely expected to finish with the largest number of seats in parliament.
Acting chairman of the military-backed USDP said the result will be accepted without ‘reservation’ .
“We lost,” Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) acting chairman Htay Oo toldthe Reuters news agency in an interview a day after the Southeast Asian country’s first free nationwide election in quarter of a century.
Regardless of the result, the election will not create a fully democratic Burma, which ended half a century of military rule in 2011, followed by a quasi-civilian government run by a party made up of former military figures now expected to fare badly in the elections. The constitution reserves 25% of parliamentary seats for the military, and was rewritten to keep Ms Suu Kyi from the presidency.
The amendment bars anyone with a foreign spouse or child from holding the president’s and vice presidents’ positions. Ms Suu Kyi’s two sons are British, as was her late husband.
Ms Suu Kyi, however, has said she will act as the country’s leader if the NLD wins the presidency, saying she will be “above the president”.
In her first comments after Sunday’s elections, Ms Suu Kyi told a crowd gathered at the NLD party headquarters that, while vote tabulations would not be announced until later, “I think you all have the idea of the results.”
“It is still a bit early to congratulate our candidates who will be the winners,” she said. “I want to remind you all that even candidates who didn’t win have to accept the winners but it is important not to provoke the candidates who didn’t win to make them feel bad.”
The NLD had thousands of monitors deployed across Burma during the vote, keeping track as each polling station closed and publicly announced its totals. That was expected to give NLD leaders a solid estimate of final numbers long before official totals were announced.
Win Htein, the NLD spokesman, told the AP that the party’s strongest showing is in the heartland states, where it appears to be garnering 80% of the votes. The support falls off slightly to 70 per cent -50 per cent in the states dominated by ethnic minorities.
“Dawn of a new era. Millions vote in historic election” was the banner headline on Monday of the New Light of Myanmar, a government-owned newspaper and long a mouthpiece for ruling juntas, reflecting just how much Burma has changed in recent years.
The vote was billed as the freest ever in the south-east Asian nation, which for the first time was monitored by thousands of domestic and international observers, who said it went well. Many of the eligible 30 million voters cast ballots for the first time, including Ms Suu Kyi, widely revered as the embodiment of the country’s dreams for democratic reform.
“I am so happy and I am not the only person — the whole country is happy. I think she is a perfect leader for our country and a woman of perfection,” said 71-year-old Khin Maung Htay, who was listening to Ms Suu Kyi’s speech.
Although 91 parties fielded candidates on Sunday, the main fight was between the NLD and the ruling Union Solidarity Development Party, which is made up largely of former junta members. A host of other parties from ethnic minorities, who form 40% of Burma’s 52 million population, are also running.
The junta, which seized power in a 1962 coup, annulled the results when Ms Suu Kyi’s party won a sweeping victory in 1990 elections. A new vote was held in 2010, but the opposition boycotted it, saying the election laws were unfair.
The USDP won by default and took office in 2011 under President Thein Sein, a former general who began political and economic reforms to end Burma’s isolation and jump-start its moribund economy. But the USDP was battered in a 2012 by-election in which the National League for Democracy won 43 of the 44 parliamentary seats it contested.
After the election results are finalised, the new members of parliament and the military appointees will propose three candidates, and then elect one as president. The other two will become vice presidents.
The NLD would need an overwhelming win to take the presidency because of the seats reserved for the military, all of which now go to the USDP.
As hundreds of supporters waited outside the NLD headquarters in Rangoon, crowds started singing a song called The Strong Peacock, in reference to the party’s symbol, which became popular during the campaign period.
“She is the people’s leader that the whole world knows,” they sang. “Write your own history in your hearts for our future, so the dictatorship will end. Go, go, go (away) dictatorship.”
PA