YANGON:
Myanmar's opposition claimed a historic
victory on Sunday for pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi in her bid for a
seat in parliament, sparking scenes of jubilation among crowds of supporters.
Hundreds
of people cheered as a giant screen outside National League for Democracy (NLD)
party headquarters in Yangon announced a big by-election win for Suu Kyi.
Some
people wept with joy at the news, which if confirmed would mark a stunning
turnaround for the former political prisoner, who was locked up by the former
junta for most of the past 22 years.
"We
have been waiting for this day for a long time. I'm so happy," said NLD
supporter Kalyar, who goes by one name.
The
Nobel peace laureate took an estimated 82 per cent of the vote in Kawhmu
constituency, said NLD senior member Tin Oo, based on the party's own
unofficial tally. Official results were expected within a week.
The
party also claimed it had won at least 10 of the other 45 seats at stake in the
vote, which cannot threaten the army-backed ruling party's majority.
"We
are so happy and waiting for the other results," said NLD senior member
Mwint Mwint Win.
Observers
believe Myanmar's new quasi-civilian government wants Suu Kyi to win a place in
parliament to burnish its reform credentials and smooth the way for an easing
of Western sanctions.
Many of
her supporters had earlier waited for hours in searing heat to catch a glimpse
of the 66-year-old, who was running for political office for the first time.
In
rural villages dotted between parched fields, people stood in front of their thatched
bamboo homes and waved enthusiastically as Suu Kyi's convoy snaked past,
whipping up thick clouds of dust.
A crowd
of supporters and journalists mobbed her as she visited a polling station in
rural Kawhmu, where her main rival was a former military doctor with the ruling
Union Solidarity and Development Party.
Voters,
many in traditional ethnic Karen dress, queued patiently in the heat to cast
their votes. In stark contrast to life under the junta, many openly expressed
their support and affection for "The Lady".
"There's
only been one person for us for 20 years," said Tin Zaw Win.
"We
believe in her and want to vote for her. Almost my whole village will vote for
Aunt Suu."
Some
people complained that their names were missing from the voter lists, although
it was unclear how many were affected.
"I
want to vote for Mother Suu but they haven't given me my ballot paper so I'm
here to demand it," Zin Min Soe told AFP at a polling station.
"They
can't just lose my vote," he added.
The
polls were also marred somewhat by allegations of ballot-paper irregularities, notably
that wax had been put over the check box for the NLD that could be rubbed off
later to cancel the vote.
It
wasn't immediately clear how widespread irregularities were.
"This
is happening around the country," NLD spokesman Nyan Win told AFP. "I
have sent a complaint letter to the union election commission."
In the
run-up to the vote, the party decried alleged intimidation of candidates and
other irregularities.
Suu Kyi
said on Friday that the vote could not be considered "a genuinely free and
fair election" but stopped short of announcing a boycott.
A 2010
general election, won by the military's political proxies, was plagued by
complaints of cheating and the exclusion of Suu Kyi, who was released from
seven straight years of house arrest shortly afterwards.
The
seats being contested Sunday were made vacant by MPs who joined the government.
The NLD
swept to a landslide election victory in 1990, but the generals who ruled the
country formerly known as Burma for decades until last year never recognised
the result.
A
gruelling schedule of rallies and speeches has taken its toll on the opposition
leader, who cancelled campaigning in the week before the vote after she fell
ill.
Suu Kyi
appeared to have recovered her strength by election day, smiling
broadly
when she emerged just after dawn from the village house where she was staying
in Kawhmu, about two hours' drive from Yangon.
After
almost half a century of military rule, the junta in March last year handed
power to a new government led by President Thein Sein, one of a clutch of
former generals who shed their uniforms to contest the 2010 election.
Since
then, the regime has surprised even its critics with a string of reforms such
as releasing hundreds of political prisoners.
But
remaining political detainees, fighting between government troops and ethnic
rebels, and alleged human rights abuses remain major concerns for Western
nations which have imposed sanctions on the regime.
Unlike
in 2010, the government allowed foreign observers and journalists to witness
Sunday's polls. More than six million people were eligible to vote.
-
AFP/fa
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