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Myanmar’s ruling junta says election will provide path to peace as polls open – but opponents criticise ‘sham’ vote | World News

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A peace pagoda in Yangon

Yangon is Myanmar’s beating heart. The bustle of busy market stalls and sight of glittering Buddhist monuments are a vision of the country those in power want the world to see.

The ruling military junta has granted the media rare access to some parts of the country in time for the election – a vote it hopes represents a return to normal, restoring civilian rule here for the first time since 2021.

But that notion has been widely criticised.

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Tom Andrews, the United Nation’s Special Rapporteur on human rights for Myanmar, has dismissed the polls, split into three stages, as “sham elections”. Other human rights organisations and governments have also condemned the ballot.

Myanmar's former leader Aung San Suu Kyi was imprisoned in 2021
Image:
Myanmar’s former leader Aung San Suu Kyi was imprisoned in 2021

Since seizing power by force nearly five years ago, the junta has imprisoned thousands of its opponents. The most notable of those is Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s last democratically elected leader. Her party, the National League For Democracy (NLD), has been dissolved and cannot run in this election. If it could, it would most likely win.

The coup also triggered a civil war that is still ongoing, with the junta locked in battle against a collection of ethnic armed groups and civilian activist forces. That means in large swathes of the country, people will be unable to vote.

There are multiple options on the ballot, but none represent genuine opposition to the junta.

The Union Solidarity and Development Party, the main military-backed party, is seen as the winner in waiting, because of its close alignment with the junta.

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Some of the party’s team in Yangon take us out on the campaign trail, determined to show us this election is free and fair.

READ MORE: Inside Myanmar’s secret jungle hospital

Myanmar's Union Solidarity and Development Party candidate San San Htay
Image:
Myanmar’s Union Solidarity and Development Party candidate San San Htay

‘People are scared, that’s why they don’t speak up’

As we walk through the market stalls in town, USDP candidate San San Htay hands out flyers while telling me she has had encouraging conversations with voters. “Mostly they say they will support me and they tell me what they want me to do for them if I win,” she says, before turning her thoughts to the criticism from the UN’s Special Rapporteur.

“This is what he says, and that’s his opinion,” she tells me, “but we have sovereignty over our nation and we have our own rights. We only need the will of our people, we only need to satisfy the will of our people.”

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San San Htay is all smiles as she moves through a market, but shortly after the campaign team leaves the mood is cagey. One woman we speak to tells us she knows nothing about the vote. Another is fearful.

“In my neighbourhood nobody talks about the election,” says the second woman. “People are scared, that’s why they don’t speak up, because of the government.”

Polling stations have now opened. Pic: Reuters/ Stringer
Image:
Polling stations have now opened. Pic: Reuters/ Stringer


The junta isn’t just waging a war on free speech. On the battlefield, one of the world’s longest running civil wars continues to rage, leaving part of this nation smouldering, tens of thousands dead and millions unable to vote.

Footage from earlier in December shows an airstrike by the junta on a hospital in the western state of Rakhine, which killed 33 people. Other videos show civilian houses burning in Western Mogok town in Mandalay, reportedly after military air strikes.

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Commander Tin Oo is one of the soldiers fighting against the junta in central Myanmar, as part of the People’s Defence Force, a civilian-led resistance group formed after the coup.

‘They’re trying to intimidate and terrify people’

Leaving the frontline to speak to me on a video call, he says the bombing by the junta has intensified in some rebel-held areas in the lead up to the election.

“The junta is intentionally carrying out air attacks on civilians in the area we control, even though it’s far away from the frontline,” he says before adding. “They’re trying to intimidate and terrify the people. Part of the reason the junta is bombing us is to protect the areas where they will hold elections.”

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It means the junta is preventing the revolutionary forces from taking over where the elections are happening.

As polling stations open, his assessment of what happens in this splintered nation is bleak.

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“Nothing will change after this sham election,” he tells me. “The fighting will carry on.”

Despite the opposition and spectre of violence, the junta says this election will provide a path to peace – with votes expected to be counted at the end of January.

Many in Myanmar, and around the world, have a less optimistic view of the future though – with concerns the thin veneer of a civilian government will only serve to strengthen an oppressive regime.

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