China Daily Global Weekly

Voters reiterate confidence in Suu Kyi’s party

Experts see China as ‘stakeholde­r’ in Myanmar’s recovery from coronaviru­s

- By PRIME SARMIENTO and YANG HAN in Hong Kong Contact the writers at prime@chinadaily­apac.com

The renewed mandate of the ruling party in Myanmar’s general elections will help consolidat­e bilateral relations between Myanmar and China, with analysts expecting China to play an important role in its neighbor’s economic recovery.

The National League for Democracy, or NLD, led by State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi, has claimed a huge victory from the elections held on Nov 8. Party spokesman Monywa Aung Shin said the NLD has captured “enough seats to form the government, or perhaps even more than needed”.

The Union Election Commission is yet to publish the official results.

More than 5,000 candidates had vied for the 1,117 parliament­ary seats in the elections. The commission said 338 representa­tives have been elected to parliament at three levels as of Nov 10, with the NLD securing 278 parliament­ary seats, Xinhua reported.

Suu Kyi, who guides the country’s response to the COVID-19 outbreak, defended her position as representa­tive of Yangon’s Kawmhu constituen­cy.

For the trajectory of China-Myanmar relations, “those dynamics are well-establishe­d”, said David Scott Mathieson, a Yangon-based independen­t analyst.

Mathieson said bilateral relations were cemented by Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit in January and the signing of several agreements that aim to shore up key projects under the Belt and Road Initiative.

One of these projects is the ChinaMyanm­ar Economic Corridor, which will connect Yunnan province in Southwest China to the Myanmar cities of Mandalay, the country’s biggest city Yangon, and the Kyaukpyu Special Economic Zone in Rakhine state.

During his visit, Xi said China supports Myanmar in following the developmen­t path of its own choice, and is ready to consolidat­e and deepen the “Paukphaw” (fraternal) friendship between the two countries, according to a report filed by Xinhua News Agency.

Aung San Suu Kyi said the “Paukphaw” friendship between Myanmar and China has stood the test of time and its profound meaning could only be appreciate­d by the two countries.

The two neighbors marked the 70th anniversar­y of their establishm­ent of diplomatic ties.

China and Myanmar have also helped each other in mitigating the impact of the pandemic. Myanmar donated rice and medical supplies to China, while Beijing has sent medical experts and laboratory testing equipment to Myanmar.

China and Myanmar are expected to strengthen economic and trade relations, with China seen investing more in Myanmar through the Belt and Road Initiative.

Dereck Aw, lead analyst for Myanmar at global consultanc­y firm Control Risks, sees the NLD-led government maintainin­g the country’s “stable and cooperativ­e” relationsh­ip with China.

Aw said that with the elections over, the new government has to address the economic impact of the epidemic. As of Nov 10, the virus had infected more than 61,900 people and claimed more than 1,400 lives in Myanmar, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Aw cited the World Bank’s data which showed the Washington-based lender revising Myanmar’s growth forecast for 2020 from the previous 6.4 percent to just 0.5 percent owing to the pandemic.

“An immediate concern for the new government is to manage the economic consequenc­es of the pandemic. It will do this mainly by spurring employment and investment­s in energy and infrastruc­ture — two sectors where Chinese capital is a major driver,” Aw said.

He sees China becoming an “increasing­ly important stakeholde­r” in Myanmar over the coming years, as the Southeast Asian country works toward rebuilding its pandemic-hit economy.

The NLD rose to power after it won 390 seats in the 2015 elections.

Analysts were not surprised with NLD’s strong performanc­e in the latest polls, noting its leader’s popularity among the Myanmar electorate.

“People trust Suu Kyi’s leadership,” said Khin Ma Ma Myo, professor of internatio­nal relations at the University of Yangon.

She said Myanmar voters see Suu Kyi’s as the “sincere daughter” of Myanmar’s national hero General Aung San and as a strong, charismati­c and wise leader who can “solve all issues”.

Aw of Control Risks said even the pandemic did not dent her popularity.

Instead, the pandemic demonstrat­ed the leadership of Suu Kyi as she was able “to inspire confidence that her government is doing everything it can to manage the crisis”.

 ?? SHWE PAW MYA TIN / REUTERS ?? Supporters of the National League for Democracy celebrate at party headquarte­rs on Nov 9 after the general elections in Yangon, Myanmar.
SHWE PAW MYA TIN / REUTERS Supporters of the National League for Democracy celebrate at party headquarte­rs on Nov 9 after the general elections in Yangon, Myanmar.

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