Austin American-Statesman

Myanmar opposition posts historic victory

Suu Kyi’s party set to form civilian government soon.

- By Grant Peck

—On the fifth anniversar­y of her release from house arrest, election results Friday showed that Aung San Suu Kyi’s opposition party had won enough seats in Parliament to allow it to form Myanmar’s first truly civilian government in more than half a century.

While complete results from Sunday’s vote still must be tallied, the state election commission announced that Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party had won 37 additional seats — pushing it over the threshold of 329 seats needed for a majority in the two house Parliament.

The party with a combined parliament­ary majority is able to select the next president, who can then name a Cabinet and form a new government. The 329 figure represents a majority in the 664-member Parliament because voting was not held in seven constituen­cies due to unrest in the Southeast Asian country.

The ruling military-backed Union Solidarity and Developmen­t Party had won just 40 seats as of Friday.

The transfer of power should take place after the new Parliament meets early next year and votes on a new president, along with two vice presidents.

The NLD will face a variety of challenges, not least of which is the huge tide of pent-up expectatio­ns evidenced by the vote. Its lack of experience in public administra­tion is another big question.

But the victory is a second chance for the party, which also won a landslide victory in the first election it contested, in 1990, only to see the results annulled by the military, and many of its leading members harassed and jailed.

Suu Kyi herself was put under house arrest prior to the 1990 election, and spent 15 of the next 22 years mostly confined to her lakeside villa in Yangon. She was under house arrest when she won the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize.

Few expect the army to put up that kind of roadblock again. It is committed to the economic opportunit­ies of a newly globalized country that encourages foreign trade and investment, and has written provisions into the constituti­on that guarantee it a leading role in running the country.

 ?? MAUNG WIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Items with images of Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi surround supporters Friday at party headquarte­rs in Yangon. The National League of Democracy faces high expectatio­ns from voters after its resounding win.
MAUNG WIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS Items with images of Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi surround supporters Friday at party headquarte­rs in Yangon. The National League of Democracy faces high expectatio­ns from voters after its resounding win.
 ??  ?? Aung San Suu Kyi
Aung San Suu Kyi

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