Junta aims for year-end election


Future plans: A file photo of members of Myanmar’s Union Election Commission inspecting voting machines in Yangon on Sept 5, 2023. Myanmar’s junta chief said they are planning to hold the election in December 2025 or January 2026. — AFP

The junta chief said the country would hold an election in December or January, the first in the war-torn nation since the military staged a coup in 2021.

“We are planning to hold the election in December 2025 or ... by January 2026,” General Min Aung Hlaing was quoted as saying in the state-run newspaper Global New Light of Myanmar published yesterday.

The vote would be “free and fair” he said on Friday during a state visit to Belarus, adding that 53 political parties had “submitted their lists” to participate.

“We also invite observation teams from Belarus to come and observe the election,” he said during a meeting with Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko in Minsk.

The Myanmar military seized power in 2021, making unsubstan­tiated claims of massive electoral fraud in 2020 polls won resoun­dingly by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD).

It has since unleashed a bloody crackdown on dissent and as figh­ting ravages swathes of the country had repeatedly delayed plans for fresh polls that critics say will be neither free nor fair.

The junta is struggling to crush widespread opposition to its rule from ethnic rebel groups and pro-democracy militias.

In 2022, the junta-stacked election commission announced that Suu Kyi’s NLD would be dissolved for failing to re-register under a tough new military-drafted electoral law.

Junta-appointed foreign minister Than Swe in December told delegates from five neighbouring countries at a meeting in Bangkok that “progress was being made” towards an election in 2025.

South-East Asian foreign ministers in January told the junta to prioritise a ceasefire in its civil war over fresh elections during a meeting in Malaysia.

The United States has said any elections under the junta would be a “sham”, while analysts say polls would be targeted by the military’s opponents. — AFP

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