Tepid early turnout for election


Members of Myanmar’s Union Election commission (UEC) count ballots after the closing of polls at a polling station in the first phase of Myanmar’s general election in Yangon on December 28, 2025. (Photo by Lillian SUWANRUMPHA / AFP)

UNDER the sha­dow of civil war and questions over the poll’s cre­dibility, voters in Myanmar cast their ballots in apparently low numbers in a general election, the first since a military coup toppled the last civilian government in 2021.

The junta, having crushed pro-democracy protests after the coup and sparked a nationwide rebellion, said the three-phase vote would bring political stability to the impoverished South-East Asian nation, despite international condemnation of the exercise.

But the United Nations, some Western countries and human rights groups have said the vote is not free, fair or credible, given ‌that anti-junta political parties are out of the running and it is illegal to criticise the polls.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, deposed by the military months after her National League for Democracy won the last general election by a landslide in 2020, remains in detention, and the party she led to power has been dissolved.

The military-aligned Union Soli­darity and Development Party, led by retired ​generals and fielding one-fifth of all candidates against severely diminished competition, is set to return to power, said Lalita Hanwong, a lecturer and Myanmar expert at Kasetsart University in Thailand.

“The junta’s election is designed to prolong the military’s power of slavery over people. And USDP and other allied parties with the military will join forces to form the next government.”

Initial voter turnout in yesterday’s polls was much lower than in the 2020 election, 10 residents of cities spread across Myanmar said.

Further rounds of voting will be held on Jan 11 and Jan 25, covering 265 of Myanmar’s 330 townships, although the junta does not have complete control of all those areas.

Preliminary results of the first phase were set to be announced yesterday, after polling booths closed at 4pm local time, junta chief Min Aung Hlaing said.

A date for the final election result has not been declared.

The junta’s attempt to establish a stable administration in the midst of war is fraught with risk, and broad foreign recognition is unlikely for any military-controlled government with a civilian veneer, according to analysts.

Tom Andrews, the UN special envoy for ‍human rights in Myanmar, said yesterday that the election was not a pathway out ‍of the country’s crisis and must be strongly rejected.

Despite the junta’s assurances, voters did not come out in numbers close to the previous election conducted under Covid-19 restrictions, including in the commercial capital of Yangon and central city of Mandalay, residents said.

The junta’s legal framework for the election has no minimum voter turnout requirement, said the Asian Network for Free Elections poll monitoring group.

Turnout was around 70% in Myanmar’s 2020 and 2015 general elections, according to the US-based nonprofit International Foundation for Electoral Systems.

There has been none of the energy and excitement of previous election campaigns, although several residents in Myanmar’s largest cities who spoke to Reuters did not report any coercion by the military administration to push people to vote.

Only a handful of polling booths in Yangon, some of them near areas housing military families, had dozens of voters queued up around midday, but others were largely sparse, said two residents of the sprawling metropolis.

“In terms of atmosphere, it isn’t as loud and enthusiastic as it was back in 2020,” said a Mandalay resident, asking not to be named because of security concerns.

In smaller cities like Myawaddy on the border with Thailand and Mawlamyine in the south-east, people cast their ballots under heavy security, four voters said.

The streets of Hakha, capital of the northern state of Chin, where fighting rages on, were empty after a local rebel group told residents to boycott the vote, two resi­dents ‍said.

“People from my quarter, none of us went to vote,” said a 63-year-old man. “We are not interested in the election.” — Reuters

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