Explainer: Suu Kyi, the army, insurgency - Myanmar's 2020 election
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[November 09, 2020]
YANGON (Reuters) - Myanmar’s ruling
party led by Aung San Suu Kyi claimed victory on Monday after a general
election seen as a referendum on the first democratic government to lead
the country since the end of decades of military rule.
The spokesman for her National League for Democracy Party (NLD) said its
unofficial count showed it had won the 322 seats needed to form a new
government, though results from the election commission had not been
released.
While the reputation of the Nobel laureate has collapsed internationally
over disputed allegations of genocide against the Rohingya Muslim
minority, she remains beloved at home and massive crowds queued from
dawn on Sunday to vote despite fears the coronavirus would dampen the
turnout.
Many spoke of the importance of retaining the NLD’s grip on power to
counterbalance the influence of the military in politics after half a
century of direct rule ended within reforms in 2011, though critics say
the party has achieved little to progress the democratic transition.
Despite the emergence of new parties, many still saw the vote as a
straight choice between the NLD and the military-backed opposition, the
Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which performed poorly.
Nevertheless, the army will remain a dominant force.
Here’s what the election means for Myanmar's complex political
landscape.
THE LADY AND THE GENERALS
Suu Kyi, 75, still known as “Mother Suu”, leads the country as state
counselor, a position she will likely retain. She has not indicated a
successor.
Critics say she runs her cabinet with an authoritarian streak and has
not gone far enough to challenge army abuses.
Despite old tensions over issues including constitutional reform, the
ruling party aligned itself with the military on key issues during its
first term, including conflict in ethnic areas and the Rohingya crisis.
The ruling party spokesman Myo Nyunt told Reuters the NLD would continue
to work “hand in hand” with the army.
Myanmar’s constitution guarantees the army a quarter of seats in
parliament and control of key ministries including Home Affairs. It also
grants the military an effective veto on any challenges.
ETHNIC GRIEVANCES
While more than 90 political parties competed in the polls, smaller
parties including the People's Pioneer Party, set up by a disillusioned
former ally of Suu Kyi, made little impression and said they were
hampered by coronavirus restrictions.
The NLD "becoming a giant party with no good oppositions is what worries
me the most", said activist Thinzar Shunlei Yi on Twitter.
Ethnic-based parties did draw votes away in states including Kayah, Mon
and Shan states, according to early results reported by media and
candidates.
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A supporter of National League for Democracy (NLD) holds two
portraits of Myanmar State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi as
people gather to celebrate at party headquarters after the
general election in Yangon, Myanmar, November 9, 2020.
REUTERS/Shwe Paw Mya Tin
Many people from ethnic minorities feel sidelined by the central
government, which is dominated by the Bamar Buddhist majority and
has pursued alienating policies including a statue-building campaign
depicting Suu Kyi's father, Aung San.
The first-past-the-post system and internal migration mean ethnic
parties receive fewer seats than they would otherwise, risking
disillusionment with the democratic process, analysts say.
A key question will be whether the NLD will reach out to ethnic
parties for government posts regardless, historian Thant Myint-U
said on Twitter.
ROHINGYA AND RAKHINE
One of the country’s gravest challenges is in the western state of
Rakhine, where 730,000 ethnic Rohingya Muslims fled in 2017
following a military crackdown the United Nations said was executed
with genocidal intent.
Myanmar is facing charges of genocide at the Hague, which it denies,
saying the campaign was legitimately targeting insurgents who
attacked police posts.
Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya are confined to camps and villages
where the vast majority are denied citizenship and freedom of
movement.
Few were able to vote on Sunday and their plight was not on the
agenda of any major party.
The Democracy and Human Rights Party, a Rohingya political party,
said the vote illustrated the “normalization” of their exclusion and
an “apartheid” system.
Rakhine is also engulfed in a worsening civil conflict between
government troops and the Arakan Army, an armed group that recruits
mostly from the majority Buddhist Rakhine population.
The majority of residents were unable to vote on Sunday after
elections were cancelled with the government citing the fighting.
A Rakhine nationalist party, the Arakan National Party, was expected
to win most seats where polls did go ahead.
It scored a sweeping victory in the region in 2015 that failed to
translate into significant political power and a similar result this
time is likely to give further fuel to the insurgency.
(Reporting by Poppy Elena McPherson; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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