The Star Malaysia

General election set for Nov 8

Suu Kyi’s party counting on another landslide win

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State media has announced Nov 8 as the date for a parliament­ary election set to serve as a test of the country’s first democratic government in half a century.

a statement attributed to union election commission chairman Hla thein and read out during an evening broadcast by Myanmar Radio and television on Wednesday said a “multi-party general election for the parliament” would be held on that day.

the polls are seen by analysts as an important test of Myanmar’s transition away from direct military rule.

Nobel peace laureate aung San Suu Kyi won power in a landslide in 2015 that ended decades of junta rule.

But her administra­tion has come under pressure internatio­nally over a military crackdown that drove hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims into Bangladesh in 2017.

at home, while Suu Kyi remains overwhelmi­ngly popular, her government has struggled to match sky-high expectatio­ns and has had to rebut criticism over escalating fighting with ethnic armed groups and slower-than-expected economic growth.

the army continues to wield enormous power under the constituti­on, which guarantees it control over key ministries, and 25% of seats in parliament.

Monywa aung Shin, a senior member of the ruling National League for Democracy (NLD) party and editor of its journal, said the party would compete in all constituen­cies across Myanmar and was developing its list of candidates.

“Just like in 2015, we do believe that we will win a landslide,” he said.

a spokesman for the major opposition, the military-backed Union Solidarity and Developmen­t Party, could not be reached for comment.

While the NLD is expected to do better than others in the election, analysts say its large majority could be dented.

“there is greater disaffecti­on with the NLD today, especially among minority ethnic communitie­s,” said Richard Horsey, a Myanmar-based political analyst with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

“But aung San Suu Kyi remains extremely popular with her base – the Bamar majority in the centre of the country.

“It is difficult to see any outcome other than another NLD landslide.” — Reuters

 ?? — aFP ?? Myanmar: a long exposure picture showing the Milky Way above a building in Kalaw, a hill town in the Shan state.
— aFP Myanmar: a long exposure picture showing the Milky Way above a building in Kalaw, a hill town in the Shan state.
 ?? — reuters ?? Indonesia: a seven-year-old male Javan rhinoceros enjoying a mud bath in ujung Kulon National Park in Banten.
— reuters Indonesia: a seven-year-old male Javan rhinoceros enjoying a mud bath in ujung Kulon National Park in Banten.
 ?? — reuters ?? Thailand: a woman wearing a face mask is reflected in a mirror as she dances inside a lounge at the Patpong nightlife district.
— reuters Thailand: a woman wearing a face mask is reflected in a mirror as she dances inside a lounge at the Patpong nightlife district.

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