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Culture > Burma > In nod to world...
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In nod to world pressure, Myanmar delays vote in some areas

by "Zomi" <zomi@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 6, 2008 at 11:07 AM

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Zomi says:

The generals are ruled by Attahita (selfishness). They do not know what 
Prahita (interest in the welfare of others) means. They are keen to 
monopolize on state power.

Highlights:

The government has been criticized for failing to rush aid to victims, 
angering a public already simmering with discontent after the junta's
deadly 
crackdown on pro-democracy protests last September.

"People are trying to rebuild their lives, find their families and
friends. 
Nobody is interested in going to vote," Aung Din, director of the 
Wa****ngton-based advocacy group U.S. Campaign for Burma, said Monday,
adding 
that the junta's slow response to the cyclone would likely generate a 
stronger "No" vote.

Myanmar watchers say the run-up to the referendum has been marked by no 
debate, no polls and no effort to inform the public about the contents of 
the draft constitution.

Any hint of criticism has been quickly silenced.

=====

In nod to world pressure, Myanmar delays vote in some areas

By JOCELYN GECKER, Associated Press Writer
2 hours, 23 minutes ago

Bowing partly to international demands, Myanmar's junta decided Tuesday to

postpone voting on a new and long-awaited constitution in areas
hardest-hit 
by a devastating cyclone as the death toll soared.

For the rest of the country, however, polling stations were expected to
open 
Saturday as planned. The decision drew swift criticism from dissidents and

human rights groups who question the credibility of the vote and urged the

junta to focus on disaster victims.

"They should suspend the referendum completely and devote all their
national 
resources to the affected areas," said Debbie Stothard, head of the 
Southeast Asian human rights group ALTSEAN-Burma. Myanmar is also known as

Burma. "They really need to prioritize ... and make sure that no more
people 
die from exposure or from malnutrition or illness."

Logistically and politically, it couldn't be a worse time to ask voters to

approve a draft constitution that critics say is designed to cement
military 
rule.

Tropical cyclone Nargis struck Myanmar over the weekend, killing tens of 
thousands of people and leaving tens of thousands more missing, state
radio 
re****ted. Most of dead were in the low-lying Irrawaddy delta region while
a 
smaller number died around Yangon, the country's largest city, according
to 
the information minister.

State radio Tuesday broadcast the junta's announcement that voting on the 
military-backed constitution would be delayed until May 24 in most of the 
town****ps around Yangon and in seven of the Irrawaddy delta town****ps.

The announcement implied that voting would proceed as planned in the rest
of 
the country this weekend, including many areas still struggling with a
lack 
of electricity, water and shelter caused by the cyclone that left as many
as 
1 million homeless, according to the U.N. World Food Program.

The government has been criticized for failing to rush aid to victims, 
angering a public already simmering with discontent after the junta's
deadly 
crackdown on pro-democracy protests last September.

"People are trying to rebuild their lives, find their families and
friends. 
Nobody is interested in going to vote," Aung Din, director of the 
Wa****ngton-based advocacy group U.S. Campaign for Burma, said Monday,
adding 
that the junta's slow response to the cyclone would likely generate a 
stronger "No" vote.

But public opinion - and whether or not voters in cyclone-hit areas can 
physically reach polling stations - doesn't appear to be the junta's 
concern, according to political analysts.

"The military regime has never had any intention of holding a free and
fair 
vote," said Monique Skidmore, a Myanmar expert and professor at Australian

National University. "They don't care if everyone votes or not. They care 
about the outcome and I have no doubt they will manipulate the outcome in 
their favor."

Myanmar's generals have hailed the referendum as an im****tant step forward

in their "roadmap to democracy." It offers the first chance for voters to 
cast ballots since 1990, and the probability is high they will approve the

constitution - a legal framework the country has lacked for two decades.

But critics, including the United Nations, the United States and human 
rights groups, question whether it will lead to democracy.

"The constitution will continue military power. There's no question about 
that," said David Steinberg, a Myanmar expert and Georgetown University 
professor who has been granted rare visits to meet junta officials.

The 194-page draft constitution paves the way for elections promised in 
2010. It calls for a multiparty system, which the junta describes as a 
"discipline-flouri****ng democracy," in which the military retains key 
powers.

Myanmar has been ruled by military regimes since 1962. The current junta 
seized power in 1988, throwing out the country's last constitution.

A junta-appointed committee took 14 years to draft the proposed charter, 
refusing U.N. demands to seek input from the opposition.

One provision was apparently custom-made to keep detained democracy leader

Aung San Suu Kyi sidelined. It bars from elected office anyone married to
a 
foreigner or with children holding a foreign nationality.

The 62-year-old widow, who has been detained for 12 of the past 18 years, 
was married to a British man and has two children who are British
nationals. 
Deemed a national security threat, she is the world's only imprisoned
Nobel 
Peace Prize recipient.

In the country's last election in 1990, Suu Kyi's National League for 
Democracy party won a landslide victory that the junta refused to honor. 
Instead, the generals stepped up arrests and repression of dissidents.

A strong military presence in future governments would be guaranteed by 
clauses in the draft charter that reserve several Cabinet seats for
military 
officers as well as one-quarter of the seats in both houses of parliament.

Changing the text would be tricky: Amendments would require approval by
more 
than 75 percent of lawmakers, meaning backing from some of the soldiers 
sitting in parliament.

Myanmar watchers say the run-up to the referendum has been marked by no 
debate, no polls and no effort to inform the public about the contents of 
the draft constitution.

Any hint of criticism has been quickly silenced.

Suu Kyi's pro-democracy party said in a recent statement the military has 
stepped up harassment and arrests of its members, some of whom dared to
step 
out in public last month wearing T-****rts that said, "No."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080506/ap_on_re_as/myanmar_the_junta_s_vote

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 1 Posts in Topic:
In nod to world pressure, Myanmar delays vote in some areas
"Zomi" <zomi  2008-05-06 11:07:02 

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tan12V112 Mon Oct 6 11:54:05 CDT 2008.