Oman Daily Observer

Most citizens overseas left out of historic vote

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YANGON: Red tape and confusion prevented all but a few thousand of more than two million Myanmar citizens working overseas to sign up to vote in the first free elections since the end of military rule, leaving the vast majority without a voice.

Workers and activists blamed bureaucrac­y, uncertaint­y over the deadline and a lack of documentat­ion, adding that Myanmar embassies made little effort to inform potential voters about the November 8 election.

Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy is expected to win the vote. It was not immediatel­y clear what the low registrati­on will mean to the result, but given that most of those overseas fled military rule, they would be unlikely supporters of the ruling, army-backed Union Solidarity and Developmen­t Party.

Migrants had to provide a range of official documents to verify they had the right to vote, including a printed copy of their local ward voter list - a document nearly impossible to obtain for most labourers, activists said.

“It’s easier said than done to get a copy of the voter list in time,” David Than, a Myanmar engineer working in Singapore, said by phone.

Fewer than 19,000 overseas voters managed to register before the deadline. Millions of Myanmar citizens fled poverty, harassment and war in a country ran for 49 years by a regime that reduced the economy to shambles, destroyed livelihood­s and forced people to seek better opportunit­ies elsewhere.

Since 2011, the semi-civilian government of President Thein Sein has introduced reforms and opened up the economy, encouragin­g some to come back, but millions remain abroad - mostly working on plantation­s, in restaurant­s and as garment factory workers in neighbouri­ng Thailand.

“Many workers here have their passports taken away from them and kept by their employers,” said Kyaw Thein, an activist looking after the rights of Myanmar workers in Thailand.

Passports are also needed to register for voting.

Bureaucrat­ic chaos also contribute­d to the low registrati­on rate. The Foreign Ministry set the deadline for late August, while the Union Election Commission later said that deadline was tentative and it would have accepted applicatio­ns submitted later.

— Reuters

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