Myanmar begins historic vote
April 1, 2012
By the CNN Wire Staff
Voters in Myanmar went
to the polls Sunday in a historic election, the first time credible
alternatives to the ruling party have appeared on the country's ballot.
Aung San Suu Kyi, the
Nobel Peace Prize winner who symbolizes the fight for democracy in the Asian
nation, was one of the candidates competing for 45 parliamentary vacancies created by the promotion of lawmakers to
the Cabinet and other posts last year.
Released in 2010 by
Myanmar's military rulers after years under house arrest, Suu Kyi has been
traveling up and down the country, rallying support for her once-banned
National League for Democracy party.
Followed by hundreds
of people in Wathinkha, Suu Kyi visited a polling station, where she spoke with
election monitors and voters. Suu Kyi was planning to make other stops around
the country.
Polls opened at 6 a.m.
Sunday (7:30 p.m. ET Saturday), and were set to close eight hours later. Voters
will weigh in during a time of enormous change in Myanmar, also known as Burma,
which has been secluded
and ruled by a military junta for decades.
In the past 12 months,
the country has pardoned hundreds of political prisoners, secured a cease-fire
with Karen rebels and has agreed to negotiate with other ethnic rebel groups. Freer press rules have encouraged the proliferation of journals
and magazines.
Myanmar's efforts to thaw its frosty relations
with the rest of the world have been warmly welcomed and rewarded. In recent
months, a steady procession of foreign ministers has visited the country and,
in February, the EU lifted a travel ban on Myanmar officials.
There have been hints,
too, that the a free and fair vote on Sunday will lead to the relatively swift unraveling of sanctions that have long
choked the country's economy.
Unlike the 2010
general election, international observers have been invited to monitor the vote. The
United States, the European Union and members of the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations are sending monitors, as are Japan, Canada and Australia.
Analysts say the
election will be the first real test of the government's commitment to removing
the fear and paranoia of citizens silenced by nearly five decades of military
rule. After attracting international condemnation for manipulating the voting process two years
ago, Myanmar's leaders know that a fair election will be proof to the world
that it can conduct a legitimate
vote.
Thousands of Burmese
living in exile around the world are watching the election for a clear sign
that it is safe to return home. Young voters in Myanmar appeared to be
particularly excited about the polling.
The vote will not tip
the balance in Myanmar's Legislature, which has 664 members according to
ElectionGuide.org. And analysts say that the sheer number and spread of polling
booths across the country will make it impossible for international monitors to
ensure an honest count.
Suu Kyi said she
believes voting irregularities, illegal activities and intimidation have been
encouraged by official entities.
But she doesn't
"regret having taken part" in the election campaign because it has
raised political awareness among Myanmar's population. Suu
Kyi is expected to win her seat in Kawhmu, south of Yangon(仰光) .
The daughter of Gen.
Aung San, a hero of Burmese (緬甸語) independence, the
66-year-old Suu Kyi herself became an inspiration with her long struggle for
democracy in the country.
As a member of
parliament, Suu Kyi would also be expected to be free to travel outside Myanmar
-- and more importantly to return -- something that wasn't possible during her
long years of repression and confinement.
She told hundreds of
journalists gathered outside her residence Friday that she didn't plan on
becoming a minister in the military-backed civilian government, if a position
was offered to her. Under Myanmar's constitution, lawmakers can't hold ministerial office.
Asked where she would
place Myanmar's democracy on a scale of one to 10, Suu Kyi said, "We're
trying to get to one."
Structure
of the Lead:
WHAT-Voters in Myanmar went to the polls
Sunday in a historic election
WHO- Aung San Suu Kyi
WHEN- April
1, 2012
WHERE- Myanmar
WHY- Myanmar's leaders know that a
fair election will be proof to the world that it can conduct a legitimate vote.
HOW-not given
Keywords:
1.
Ballot
選票
2.
Parliamentary
國會的
3.
Vacancies
空缺
4.
Seclude
使隔離
5.
Negotiate
談判
6.
Ethnic
種族的
7.
Proliferation
擴散
8.
Thaw
瓦解
9.
Unravel
拆散
10.
Sanctions
制裁
11.
Monitor
監控
12.
Manipulate
操縱
13.
Legitimate
合法的
14.
Entity
實體
15.
Constitution
憲法
Domestic is the mainstream in the world now. Many yeas ago, someone helps us to be free such as Aung San Suu Kyi. She is truly a courageous woman to fight for Myanmar by peaceful action. And she did it finally. This news really encourages me to do what I think it is right. And I hope everyone can view Aung San Suu Kyi as a demonstration.
回覆刪除Dictatorship is no longer the proper political power all over the world; instead, all of us need is democracy. I think Aung San Suu Kyi did a right thing and she also led her country to become a democratic country more closely. She fought for the rights of people in Myanmar and the she deserved this result. She is the person we need to admire and respect.
回覆刪除Aung San Suu Kyi, who won the Nobel Prize; he was a congressman, she believes can change the future of Myanmar, hoping to allow Burma to become a democratic country.It was big progress of Myanmar.
回覆刪除Aung San Suu Kyi has already work for Myanmar's democratic many years, she experience a lot of things to make Myanmar have this kind of improvement. Let's pray for Myanmar, make this world more democratic.
回覆刪除