Myanmar’s Suu Kyi poised to win parliamentary seat

WAH THIN KHA, Myan­mar (AP) — Myan­mar held a land­mark elec­tion Sun­day that was expected to send democ­racy icon Aung San Suu Kyi into par­lia­ment for her first pub­lic office since launch­ing her decades-long strug­gle against the military-dominated government.

Sunday’s by-election, to fill a few dozen vacant seats, fol­lowed months of sur­pris­ing reforms by a nom­i­nally civil­ian gov­ern­ment that does not rel­ish ced­ing ground to Suu Kyi, but which must appear more demo­c­ra­tic in order to emerge from decades of inter­na­tional iso­la­tion that have crip­pled the South­east Asian nation’s economy.

Suu Kyi’s party and its oppo­si­tion allies will have almost no say even if they win all the seats they are con­test­ing, because the 664-seat par­lia­ment will remain dom­i­nated by the mil­i­tary and the military-backed rul­ing party.

But if Suu Kyi takes office as expected, it would sym­bol­ize a giant leap toward national rec­on­cil­i­a­tion after nearly a quarter-century in which she spent most of her time under house arrest. It could also nudge West­ern pow­ers closer to eas­ing eco­nomic sanc­tions they have imposed on the coun­try for years.

In Wah Thin Kha, one of dozens of dirt-poor vil­lages south of the main city of Yan­gon, which the 66-year-old Nobel Peace Prize lau­re­ate is vying to rep­re­sent, hun­dreds of vot­ers lined up out­side a single-story pub­lic school to cast bal­lots in a local race pit­ting Suu Kyi against the rul­ing party’s Soe Min, a for­mer army doctor.

Suu Kyi slept overnight in the tiny vil­lage and then paid a morn­ing visit to the polling sta­tion, dri­ving slowly through a crowd of sup­port­ers and into the school com­pound to inspect vot­ing facil­i­ties. She chat­ted briefly with vot­ers and returned to her car to begin the drive back to Yangon.

Most res­i­dents here are poor, une­d­u­cated rice farm­ers who say that none of Myanmar’s much-heralded reforms have trick­led down to their vil­lage, which has no elec­tric­ity, run­ning water or paved roads. But they hope Suu Kyi can change that.

We’ve heard a lot on the radio about the changes, but our day-to-day life is the same,” said one voter, Go Khe­htay, who cast his bal­lot for Suu Kyi. “She may not be able to do any­thing at this stage. But one day, I believe she’ll be able to bring real change.”

Another voter, Mya Thaung, said Suu Kyi rep­re­sents a dream for a brighter future.

Life is tough here. We make just enough to sur­vive,” said the father of four. “We just hope she can improve our lives.”

Last year, Myanmar’s long-entrenched mil­i­tary junta handed power to a civil­ian gov­ern­ment dom­i­nated by retired offi­cers that skep­tics decried as a proxy for con­tin­ued mil­i­tary rule. But the new rulers — who came to power in a 2010 vote that crit­ics say was nei­ther free nor fair — have sur­prised the world with a wave of reform, prompted in part by a desire to get West­ern sanc­tions lifted and to come out from under the influ­ence of Myanmar’s pow­er­ful neigh­bor, China.

The gov­ern­ment of Pres­i­dent Thein Sein, him­self a retired lieu­tenant gen­eral, has freed polit­i­cal pris­on­ers, signed truces with rebel groups and opened a direct dia­logue with Suu Kyi, who wields enough moral author­ity to greatly influ­ence the Myan­mar pol­icy of the U.S. and other powers.

Her deci­sion to endorse Thein Sein’s reforms so far and run in the elec­tion was a great gam­ble. Once in par­lia­ment, she can seek to influ­ence pol­icy and chal­lenge the gov­ern­ment from within. But she also risks legit­imiz­ing a régime she has fought against for decades while gain­ing lit­tle true leg­isla­tive power.

Suu Kyi is in a “strate­gic sym­bio­sis” with some of the country’s gen­er­als and ex-generals, said Maung Zarni, a Myan­mar expert and a vis­it­ing fel­low at the Lon­don School of Economics.

They need her and she needs them to break the 25 years of polit­i­cal stale­mate,” Zarni said. “She holds the key for the régime’s need for its inter­na­tional accep­tance and normalization.”

On Fri­day, Suu Kyi told reporters that she hoped “to win the mil­i­tary over, to (make them) under­stand that we have to work together if we want peace and if we want progress.”

The mil­i­tary must under­stand that “the future of this coun­try is their future and that reform in this coun­try means reform for them as well,” she said.

Sunday’s poll marks the first foray into elec­toral pol­i­tics by Suu Kyi’s National League for Democ­racy party since win­ning a land­slide elec­tion vic­tory in 1990. The mil­i­tary annulled those results and kept Suu Kyi in deten­tion for much of the next two decades. The party boy­cotted the last vote in 2010, but in Jan­u­ary the gov­ern­ment amended key elec­toral laws, paving the way for a run in this weekend’s ballot.

Dur­ing a news con­fer­ence Fri­day, Suu Kyi cast seri­ous doubt over the ballot’s fair­ness, say­ing it could not be called free or fair because of myr­iad irreg­u­lar­i­ties and intim­i­da­tion dur­ing the cam­paign. Her party says elec­toral offi­cials have ille­gally can­vassed for the rul­ing party, oppo­si­tion posters have been van­dal­ized, and that while some voter lists lack eli­gi­ble vot­ers, oth­ers include the names of the dead.

Still, Suu Kyi said that she had no regrets in join­ing the race, and that she was deter­mined to go ahead “because we think this is what our peo­ple want.”

Asso­ci­ated Press writer Aye Aye Win con­tributed to this report.

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