World famous Shwedagon Pagoda, Rangoon, Burma (Farnesina/flickr.com). |
Daw (the Lady) Aung San Suu Kyi addressing supporters during demonstrations. |
Aung San Suu Kyi comes to U.S. and wins White House award (AFP/BBC) |
Burmese migrant worker in neighboring Thailand holds a Burmese sign that reads, "Mother Aung San Suu Kyi, Be Happy" on May 31, 2012 (Wason Wanichakor/AP) |
Suu Kyi above poster of her famous father, Aung San (Wei Deng/Weiontheway/flickr) |
Suu Kyi ally says election results looking good
Muslims stand in a line to cast their vote outside of a polling station in Mandalay, Burma, Sunday Nov. 8, 2015. Burma voted Sunday in historic elections that will test whether popular mandate will help loosen the military’s longstanding hold on power even if opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s party secures a widely-expected victory. |
RANGOON, Burma - The latest on landmark elections in Burma. All times local. What's the latest?
7:25 PM
A co-founder of Aung San Suu Kyi's
opposition party has told a crowd outside the party's headquarters not
to expect results from Burma's historic general election tonight, but
that the outcome appears to be "very good."
Tin Oo thanked the thousands of people waiting
outside the National League for Democracy's headquarters, where giant
screens were erected to show vote counting after polls closed Sunday. He
told them: "We won't be able to announce the result yet. All I can say
is that the NLD is in a very good position."
He said that the 70-year-old Suu Kyi would not come
out to speak to the crowd Sunday night and asked supporters to return
Monday morning. Initially, the NLD had said it expected to announce its
provisional tally of ballots late Sunday or early Monday. But Tin Oo
said announcements would wait until counting was completed.
The Election Commission has not said when final, official results are expected.
5:30 PM
Crowds
are gathering outside the headquarters of Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition
party in Rangoon after polls closed in Burma's historic election.
Thousands
of people clogged the road late Sunday afternoon and cheered in support
of the National League for Democracy, which is expected to win a big
victory.
Big screens were erected outside the party headquarters
broadcasting TV images of vote counting. Cheers erupted after every vote
announced for the NLD.
The opposition party is expected to
announce unofficial results late Sunday or early Monday, based on
tallies from its massive team of election observers throughout the
country.
One woman, 49-year-old Aye Mhu, was among the crowd in
front of the NLD's office. She described her state of mind as excited,
ecstatic and happy as she watched the votes being tallied on giant
screens.
She said: "I've never been this happy in my life. This is the happiest day of my life."
4:30 PM
Polls have closed on schedule in Burma's historic general election.
Officials
shut the doors of by-now empty polling booths at 4:30 p.m. Sunday. Most
people had cast their votes in the morning, well before a heavy
downpour beat down in Rangoon an hour before voting ended.
The
election is seen as the first real chance for democracy to take root in Burma. It is expected to be won by Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition
National League for Democracy party.
12:30 PM
From behind
barricades, Burma's long-persecuted Rohingya Muslims expressed anger,
sadness, and hopelessness at being blocked from the country's historic
election.
Abdul Melik, a 29-year-old member of the ethnic
minority, spent election day watching other people vote. He stared out
from a camp on the outskirts of western Rakhine state's capital, Sittwe,
where the Rohingya are forced to live in squalid camps and can't leave
without official approval.
"I can see the Buddhist Rakhine, the
Kaman Muslim and Hindus voting at a polling station close to the
barricades," he said in a telephone conversation. "We were hoping that
somehow we'd be allowed to vote. But today I have lost hope of any
change in my lifetime."
"This is the day that hope ends," he added. "We are angry and sad for losing the right to vote."
There
are concerns about the vote's credibility, because for the first time
about 500,000 eligible voters from the country's 1.3-million-strong
Rohingya Muslim minority have been barred from casting ballots. The
government considers them foreigners even though they have lived in Burma for generations. Neither the opposition party led by Aung San
Suu Kyi nor the military-backed ruling party is fielding a single Muslim
candidate.
10:30 AM
The European Union's chief observer
at the Burma elections says morning polling at the historic vote
seemed "rather reliable" in Rangoon, the largest city.
Alexander
Lambsdorff, head of the EU's Election Observation Mission Burma 2015,
was monitoring voting at a school in Rangoon where opposition leader Aung
San Suu Kyi cast her ballot.
He said: "I can say at this time, on
the morning of election day, that so far what we are observing is a
procedure that looks as if it's rather reliable."
He added that, "it's not free of flaws or shortcomings, but we did not expect that."
Some
issues seen ahead of the vote as potential problems "do not seem to
pose a great problem at this point in time," such as voters lists and
problems with identification of voters.
However, he said he could
only speak for the situation in Rangoon, the largest city in Burma: "In
the countryside, perhaps we will get a different kind of information."
Analysts and observers have said the potential for fraud in remote, rural areas without observers was a matter of concern.
10:00 AM
President
Jimmy Carter's grandson says there is a lot of excitement about Burma's historic elections, with some people arriving at polling
stations as early as 3 a.m.
Jason Carter, a trustee of the Carter
Center, says: "It's been a remarkable day already. We're excited to see
the energy of the Burmese people. It's clearly been an important day for
them."
In stark contrast to decades past, Burma's government
has opened its doors to monitors from 28 nations, who together with
local watchdogs number nearly 11,000. There are around 40,000 polling
stations.
President Carter's center has deployed 62 monitors in Burma. It is the group's 101st election monitoring mission.
According
to Jason Carter, enthusiasm was high among both voters and observers:
"We talked to one (voter) who waited since 3 in the morning," he said.
And the group had gotten a report from one of its team who was getting
ready to get on a boat to go to a remote area inaccessible by car.
9:30 AM
Opposition
leader Aung San Suu Kyi has cast her ballot in a polling booth near her
lake-side residence to elect a legislator for the Bahan constituency in Rangoon.
Accompanied by bodyguards and personal assistants, she
walked into the crowded cramped corridor surrounded by hundreds of
journalists before entering the voting room on Sunday. As she voted,
journalists jostled to take her pictures. She then walked away without
stopping to talk to journalists.
The two main candidates
contesting in Sunday's vote are her party's Tun Myint and the ruling
Union Solidarity Development Party's Ye Aung.
The general
elections are seen as the first real chance for democracy to take root
in Burma. They are expected to be won by Suu Kyi's National League for
Democracy party.
9:00AM
Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has cast her ballot in Burma's elections.
Suu Kyi voted Sunday in a polling station near her home in Rangoon.
She
is running for a seat she has held in the lower house of Parliament,
which she's expected to win easily. Her opposition party, the National
League for Democracy, is also expected to win in a race against the
ruling Union Solidarity Development Party, made up largely of former
junta members.
Suu Kyi's party won just over 80 percent of
parliamentary seats in the 1990 general election, even though she and
her top deputy were under house arrest. A shocked army refused to seat
the winning lawmakers, with the excuse that a new constitution first had
to be implemented — a task that ended up taking 18 years to accomplish.
Suu
Kyi was again under house arrest for the next general election in 2010,
which the NLD boycotted because it considered election laws unfair.
Still, the vote ended the junta era — which had begun in 1962 — and
ultimately installed President Thein Sein, a former general who began
instituting political and economic reforms to end Burma's isolation
from much of the world and jumpstart its moribund economy.
7:00 AM
Hundreds
of voters have lined up in a cramped school corridor where opposition
leader Aung San Suu Kyi will cast her ballot later Sunday.
Holding
their ID cars, the old, young, middle-aged and teenagers waited eagerly
for their chance to vote in a snaking queue in the two-story school
with green walls.
Many of the voters in the district, where Suu Kyi lives in a lake-side home, are from affluent families.
Some
young voters say they are enjoying their first time voting, while the
older ones say this is their best experience. Many had lined up long
before the iron gates of the school were thrown open.
A first-timer, Ohnmar, who goes by one name, was so excited she couldn't sleep the whole night.
The
38-year-old woman says: "I came to vote because I want change in my
country. I think Aung San Suu Kyi will win if this is a real free and
fair election."
6:00 AM
Polls have opened in Burma's historic elections that are expected to be won by opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi's party.
Sunday's
elections are seen as a test whether the military's grip on power will
loosen, allowing the country to transition toward greater democracy. Burma was ruled by a junta for 50 years until 2011, and then for five
years by a quasi-civilian government comprising former generals.
As voting began, long lines formed outside polling booths set up in Buddhist temples, schools and government buildings.
A
total of 91 parties are contesting, but the main fight is between Suu
Kyi's National League for Democracy and the military-backed Union
Solidarity Development Party. Some 30 million voters are eligible to cast ballots over the next 10 ½ hours. More
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