THISDAY

Myanmar: Ruling Party Concedes Defeat as Suu Kyi Heads for Landslide

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Myanmar’s ruling party yesterday conceded defeat in the country’s general election as the opposition led by democracy activist, Aung San Suu Kyi, appeared on course for a landslide victory that could ensure it forms the next government.

“We lost,”Union Solidarity and Developmen­t Party (USDP) acting chairman Htay Oo told Reuters a day after the Southeast Asian country’s first free nationwide election in a quarter of a century.

By late afternoon, vendors outside the headquarte­rs of the National League for Democracy (NLD) in Yangon were selling red T-shirts with Suu Kyi’s face and the words“We won”.

The election commission later began announcing constituen­cyby-constituen­cy results from Sunday’s poll. All of the first 12 parliament­ary seats announced were won by Suu Kyi’s party.

The keenly watched vote was Myanmar’s first general election since its long-ruling military ceded power to President Thein Sein’s quasi-civilian government in 2011, ushering in a period of reform and opening up to foreign investment.

The NLD said its own tally of results posted at polling stations around the country showed it was on track to win more than 70 percent of the seats being contested in parliament, above the two-thirds threshold it needs to form Myanmar’s first democratic­ally elected government since the early 1960s.

“They must accept the results, even though they don’t want to,”NLD spokesman Win Htein told Reuters, adding that in the highly populated central region the Nobel peace laureate’s party looked set to win more than 90 percent of seats.

Reuters was not able to independen­tly verify the party’s own estimates of its performanc­e.

Earlier, a smiling Suu Kyi appeared on the balcony of the NLD’s headquarte­rs and in a brief address urged supporters to be patient and wait for the official results.

Traffic squeezed at a walking pace through a fast-gathering crowd outside the NLD office after the first results were announced. They listened to songs and watched a Suu Kyi video on a big screen hung from the building, though many huddled under umbrellas as torrential rain dampened the mood.

I’m very happy about the result,” said Hnin Si, 60, a trader in Yangon.“The people have suffered for 50 years. I believe Aung San Suu Kyi will make the country a better place.”

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 ??  ?? British Deputy High Commission­er, Ray Kyles, laying a wreath to mark the annual Remembranc­e Ceremony in honour of those killed in World Wars One and Two and later conflicts at Commonweal­th War Graves, Yaba, Lagos...recently
British Deputy High Commission­er, Ray Kyles, laying a wreath to mark the annual Remembranc­e Ceremony in honour of those killed in World Wars One and Two and later conflicts at Commonweal­th War Graves, Yaba, Lagos...recently
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