YANGON: Aung San Suu Kyi has officially been declared the winner of Myanmar's election, making history in the once hermit nation ruled for half a century by brutal dictators.
Days of painstakingly slow vote counting on Friday finally gave Ms Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy more than half the seats in the country's 329 seat parliament, allowing the 70-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner to nominate a president and form a government.
The NLD decimated the ruling military-based party at last Sunday's elections, the first free vote in 25 years, winning up up to 80 per cent of the vote in a huge show of support for Ms Suu Kyi, who spent 15 years under house arrest.
Supporters danced in the streets in the hours after the vote as it became clear she was headed towards a landslide victory.
Ms Suu Kyi urged her millions of supporters to be careful not to provoke their rivals as she prepares to take power when parliament resumes in February.
She also urged them to overcome their fears of Myanmar's powerful army following her party's landslide election victory, telling them: "We cannot be caught up in the bond of suspicion."
Ms Suu Kyi told Radio Free Asia that army chiefs have assured her they "want to be with the people" and distrust will decline following the vote for freedom.
Ms Suu Kyi's message came amid lingering fears the military might overturn the vote, as it did when the NLD won a previous landslide victory in 1990.
The army remains the country's most powerful institution and will have to make accommodations with Ms Suu Kyi's party as it moves to form a government to ensure stability in the country of 52 million people.
Ms Suu Kyi has said she plans to run the government above a "puppet" president, despite being barred from the post under an army-written constitution.
Asked why so many people voted for her party, Ms Suu Kyi said: "Our hearts beat in the same note. We struggled together, and we had hopes together. We dreamed together for nearly 30 years. The NLD and the people are comrades-in-arms. I think that is the reason they supported us."
Officials of Ms Suu Kyi's party say obtaining the release of 112 political prisoners and another 479 alleged dissidents who are on trial or facing potential prison sentences will be a priority of the incoming administration.
Days of painstakingly slow vote counting on Friday finally gave Ms Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy more than half the seats in the country's 329 seat parliament, allowing the 70-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner to nominate a president and form a government.
The NLD decimated the ruling military-based party at last Sunday's elections, the first free vote in 25 years, winning up up to 80 per cent of the vote in a huge show of support for Ms Suu Kyi, who spent 15 years under house arrest.
Supporters danced in the streets in the hours after the vote as it became clear she was headed towards a landslide victory.
Ms Suu Kyi urged her millions of supporters to be careful not to provoke their rivals as she prepares to take power when parliament resumes in February.
She also urged them to overcome their fears of Myanmar's powerful army following her party's landslide election victory, telling them: "We cannot be caught up in the bond of suspicion."
Ms Suu Kyi told Radio Free Asia that army chiefs have assured her they "want to be with the people" and distrust will decline following the vote for freedom.
Ms Suu Kyi's message came amid lingering fears the military might overturn the vote, as it did when the NLD won a previous landslide victory in 1990.
The army remains the country's most powerful institution and will have to make accommodations with Ms Suu Kyi's party as it moves to form a government to ensure stability in the country of 52 million people.
Ms Suu Kyi has said she plans to run the government above a "puppet" president, despite being barred from the post under an army-written constitution.
Asked why so many people voted for her party, Ms Suu Kyi said: "Our hearts beat in the same note. We struggled together, and we had hopes together. We dreamed together for nearly 30 years. The NLD and the people are comrades-in-arms. I think that is the reason they supported us."
Officials of Ms Suu Kyi's party say obtaining the release of 112 political prisoners and another 479 alleged dissidents who are on trial or facing potential prison sentences will be a priority of the incoming administration.
Do we dare to assume that the behaviour of the Philippine army generals 30 years ago finally had affect the mindset of the Myanmar generals. Could it be ascribed to the ASEAN?
Posted by Bo on November 14, 2015 10:20