Zürcher Nachrichten - How Myanmar's junta-run vote works, and why it might not

EUR -
AED 4.358675
AFN 76.539015
ALL 96.168535
AMD 448.05318
ANG 2.124245
AOA 1088.182592
ARS 1657.786896
AUD 1.674063
AWG 2.138984
AZN 2.015543
BAM 1.953382
BBD 2.390641
BDT 145.170328
BGN 1.992869
BHD 0.447448
BIF 3506.628442
BMD 1.186676
BND 1.496548
BOB 8.202125
BRL 6.166446
BSD 1.186931
BTN 107.580384
BWP 15.563262
BYN 3.402788
BYR 23258.855315
BZD 2.387346
CAD 1.616514
CDF 2658.154663
CHF 0.913145
CLF 0.025758
CLP 1017.076371
CNY 8.188838
CNH 8.187799
COP 4356.870138
CRC 578.583907
CUC 1.186676
CUP 31.446922
CVE 112.585944
CZK 24.2524
DJF 210.895874
DKK 7.471925
DOP 74.31561
DZD 153.803318
EGP 55.59329
ERN 17.800144
ETB 183.994471
FJD 2.599056
FKP 0.869266
GBP 0.871442
GEL 3.192001
GGP 0.869266
GHS 13.059341
GIP 0.869266
GMD 87.222664
GNF 10419.017583
GTQ 9.103733
GYD 248.341008
HKD 9.275602
HNL 31.452857
HRK 7.535512
HTG 155.427633
HUF 379.032128
IDR 19955.919859
ILS 3.635887
IMP 0.869266
INR 107.497205
IQD 1555.13928
IRR 49988.738969
ISK 145.1893
JEP 0.869266
JMD 185.420511
JOD 0.84137
JPY 181.336408
KES 153.081003
KGS 103.77536
KHR 4782.305599
KMF 492.470631
KPW 1067.995386
KRW 1708.801692
KWD 0.363966
KYD 0.989209
KZT 587.317843
LAK 25448.27336
LBP 101520.156536
LKR 367.224782
LRD 221.374356
LSL 18.821296
LTL 3.503946
LVL 0.717809
LYD 7.475311
MAD 10.844738
MDL 20.113784
MGA 5256.975829
MKD 61.626498
MMK 2492.38186
MNT 4247.727033
MOP 9.558613
MRU 47.346026
MUR 54.469818
MVR 18.346035
MWK 2060.702321
MXN 20.448854
MYR 4.631004
MZN 75.840088
NAD 18.93967
NGN 1604.766003
NIO 43.568833
NOK 11.313552
NPR 172.126767
NZD 1.96634
OMR 0.456266
PAB 1.187071
PEN 3.981317
PGK 5.100926
PHP 68.936995
PKR 331.78856
PLN 4.21549
PYG 7815.327238
QAR 4.320985
RON 5.091437
RSD 117.349242
RUB 91.651927
RWF 1723.647314
SAR 4.45048
SBD 9.55084
SCR 15.963488
SDG 713.794354
SEK 10.592202
SGD 1.49857
SHP 0.890315
SLE 28.776668
SLL 24884.007626
SOS 678.18756
SRD 44.83146
STD 24561.803346
STN 24.860868
SVC 10.386145
SYP 13124.135322
SZL 18.820461
THB 36.88368
TJS 11.175645
TMT 4.153367
TND 3.364524
TOP 2.857231
TRY 51.795931
TTD 8.041048
TWD 37.312679
TZS 3085.358977
UAH 51.054711
UGX 4201.799577
USD 1.186676
UYU 45.513669
UZS 14596.11793
VES 460.731253
VND 30806.116529
VUV 141.641213
WST 3.217699
XAF 655.168205
XAG 0.015766
XAU 0.000241
XCD 3.207052
XCG 2.139252
XDR 0.814771
XOF 652.088658
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.905234
ZAR 18.943513
ZMK 10681.507456
ZMW 22.019489
ZWL 382.109282
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.7

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    -1.6500

    87.76

    -1.88%

  • GSK

    -0.1700

    58.32

    -0.29%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.71

    +0.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    24.02

    -0.21%

  • RELX

    0.4100

    28.14

    +1.46%

  • NGG

    1.0200

    91.66

    +1.11%

  • BTI

    0.1850

    60.515

    +0.31%

  • RIO

    -1.7600

    97.76

    -1.8%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.1

    -0.23%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    16.87

    -0.36%

  • BP

    -1.5800

    36.97

    -4.27%

  • VOD

    -0.1400

    15.54

    -0.9%

  • AZN

    0.1350

    204.895

    +0.07%

How Myanmar's junta-run vote works, and why it might not
How Myanmar's junta-run vote works, and why it might not / Photo: Lillian SUWANRUMPHA - AFP/File

How Myanmar's junta-run vote works, and why it might not

Myanmar's junta presides over elections starting on Sunday, advertising the vote as a return to democratic normality five years after it mounted a coup that triggered civil war.

Text size:

The vote has been widely slated as a charade to rebrand the rule of the military, which voided the results of the last elections in 2020, alleging massive voter fraud.

Here are some key questions surrounding the heavily restricted polls:

- Who is running? -

The pro-military Union Solidarity and Development Party is by far the biggest participant, providing more than a fifth of all candidates, according to the Asian Network for Free Elections (ANFREL).

Former democratic leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her massively popular National League for Democracy party, which won a landslide in the last vote, are not taking part.

After the 2021 coup, Suu Kyi was jailed on charges rights groups say were politically motivated.

According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners advocacy group, some 22,000 political prisoners are languishing in junta jails.

The National League for Democracy and most of the parties that took part in the 2020 vote have been dissolved. ANFREL says organisations that won 90 percent of seats then will not be on Sunday's ballot.

Polling is taking place in three phases spread over a month, using new electronic voting machines which do not allow write-in candidates or spoiled ballots.

- Who can and cannot vote? -

Myanmar's civil war has seen the military lose swathes of the country to rebel forces -- a mix of pro-democracy guerillas and ethnic minority armies which have long resisted central rule -- and the vote will not take place in the areas they control.

A military-run census last year admitted it could not collect data from an estimated 19 million of the country's 50 million-odd inhabitants, citing "security constraints".

Amid the conflict, authorities have cancelled voting in 65 of the 330 elected seats of the lower house -- nearly one in five of the total.

More than one million stateless Rohingya refugees, who fled a military crackdown beginning in 2017 and now live in exile in Bangladesh, will also have no say.

- How is a winner decided? -

Seats in parliament will be allocated under a combined first-past-the-post and proportional representation system which ANFREL says heavily favours larger parties.

The criteria to register as a nationwide party able to contest seats in multiple areas have been tightened, according to the Asian election watchdog, and only six of the 57 parties standing have qualified.

Results are expected in late January.

Regardless of the outcome of the vote, a military-drafted constitution dictates a quarter of parliamentary seats be reserved for the armed forces.

The lower house, upper house, and military members each elect a vice president from among their ranks, and the combined parliament votes on which of the three will be elevated to president.

- What happened in the run-up? -

ANFREL says the Union Election Commission overseeing the vote is an organ of the Myanmar military, rather than an independent body.

The head of the commission, Than Soe, was installed after Suu Kyi's government was toppled and is subject to an EU travel ban and sanctions for "undermining democracy" in Myanmar.

Social media sites including Facebook, Instagram and X have all been blocked since the coup, curtailing the spread of information.

The junta has introduced stark legislation punishing public protest or criticism of the poll with up to a decade behind bars, pursuing more than 200 people for prosecution under the new law.

Cases have been brought over private Facebook messages, flash mob protests scattering anti-election leaflets, and vandalism of candidate placards.

Myanmar has invited international monitors to witness the poll, but few countries have answered.

On Friday, state media reported a monitoring delegation had arrived from Belarus -- a country that has been ruled since 1994 by strongman President Alexander Lukashenko, who put down pro-democracy protests six years ago.

E.Schneyder--NZN