Myanmar’s military-backed government vowed Wednesday to respect the country’s election result despite staring at a poll wipeout, as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi called for talks with the president and the powerful army chief, reports AFP from Yangon.
Government beckons for Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party after it took nearly 90 percent of the seats declared so far.
Although poll officials are yet to announce the NLD as winners, Myanmar’s balance of power, dominated for half a century by the army and its allies, appears poised to be redrawn.
But Suu Kyi’s supporters remain anxious at how the army will respond to a mauling at the polls, with memories still keen of the 1990 election — won by the NLD but then swatted away by the army.
In the first official reaction by the army-backed ruling party, Information Minsiter Ye Htut congratulated the NLD on its gains so far and vowed to “respect and obey the decision of the electorate”.
“We will work peacefully in the transfer” of responsibilities to the winning party, he said in a letter posted on Facebook, adding talks with Suu Kyi could be held after the official result is annnounced.
By the afternoon election officials had handed the NLD another 48 seats, taking its tally to 211 of the 232 seats announced so far.
The NLD needs around another 120 seats across the upper and lower houses for an outright majority, but looks on course to smash through that marker.
Earlier, Suu Kyi sent letters to President Thein Sein, Commander-in-Chief Min Aung Hlaing as well as influential parliamentary speaker Shwe Mann, calling for “national reconciliation” talks next week.
“Citizens have expressed their will in the election,” she said of the NLD’s blitz of the ruling party in Sunday’s election.
Suu Kyi’s early move to reach out to the army and its political allies shows willingness to work with her former captors — who kept her under house arrest for 15 years — to cut through Myanmar’s tangled politics.
Analysts say difficult months lie ahead, with the army still in charge of key levers of power, protected by a constitution it wrote gifting the military 25 percent of all parliamentary seats as well as key security posts.
The document also blocks the 70-year-old Suu Kyi from becoming president despite her position as the democracy movement’s magnetic force.
The NLD needs 67 percent of the contested seats to form a majority. But it is eyeing a much bigger margin — and greater clout inside the new parliament.
The democracy figurehead, who retained her seat in Kawhmu constituency, has vowed to rule from “above the president”, indicating she will use a proxy to sidestep the bar on her taking the top office.
Parliamentary speaker Shwe Mann, a former high ranking general, had been tipped as a compromise candidate for the presidency — although his star has waned inside the USDP before he too lost his seat.
The drip-feed of election results has brought frustration to NLD supporters, many of whom have waited 25 years since the party last contested a poll to cast their vote.
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The inclusion of government colleges under the public universities to reduce the burden on the National University has not seen any progress, as a committee formed by the University Grants Commission… 
Editor : M. Shamsur Rahman
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Editor : M. Shamsur Rahman
Published by the Editor on behalf of Independent Publications Limited at Media Printers, 446/H, Tejgaon I/A, Dhaka-1215.
Editorial, News & Commercial Offices : Beximco Media Complex, 149-150 Tejgaon I/A, Dhaka-1208, Bangladesh. GPO Box No. 934, Dhaka-1000.
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