A voter holds his citizen ID card while lining up to cast his ballot at a polling station in Yangon, Burma on Nov. 8, 2015. |
People stand outside a polling station in Mandalay, Burma on Nov. 8, 2015. |
Voters check the list at a polling station in the Chinatown during Myanmar's first free and fair election in Yangon on Nov. 8, 2015. |
The media prepares as Aung San Suu Kyi, leader of Burma's National League for Democracy party, arrives at a polling station in Yangon, on Nov. 8, 2015. |
Aung San Suu Kyivisits a polling station in Kawhmu township, Yangon on Nov. 8, 2015. |
People take part of the rally outside the National League for Democracy office after Burma's first free and fair election, in Yangon on Nov. 8, 2015. |
Supporters of Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi Celebrate Historic Election Night
TIME | 8 November 2015
In the bad years — and there were many — Myint Soe would prepare
meals for democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi: fish noodle soup for
breakfast and an assortment of Burmese salads, stews and rice for the
rest of the day. He knew that he courted trouble working as cook for a
Nobel Peace Prize laureate confined to house arrest by Burma’s military
regime. Yet the longtime member of her National League for Democracy
(NLD) never wavered from serving the woman he calls “sister Suu.”
As darkness fell on Nov. 8, Myint Soe — gray hair pulled into a
ponytail, sarong wrapped around his waist, betel nut nestled by his gums
— surveyed the throngs of NLD supporters in front of the party
headquarters in Rangoon, the commercial capital of a country officially
known as Myanmar. A couple hours before, the polls had closed in Burma’s
most historic election in a generation. Now the vote counting, a
process that election officials warn will take days, had begun, and the
crowds cheered as a screen overhead flashed ballots cast for the NLD. “I
will stay here all night,” said Myint Soe, as campaign songs blared
over loudspeakers. “We endured all these troubles for so long but now
this day has come because my sister always had confidence.”
The NLD may be Burma’s opposition force but expectations are high in
Rangoon that Suu Kyi’s party will prevail in Sunday’s vote. Precedent
counts in the party’s favor: in 1990, the NLD won a balloting that the
military regime ignored. Instead of taking helm of Burma’s government,
Suu Kyi was forced into house arrest for 15 years before her release in
late 2010. So adored is Suu Kyi for that sacrifice — along with her
status as daughter of independence hero Aung San — that voter after
voter in Rangoon simply reported they had chosen the NLD, the name of
the actual parliamentary candidate forgotten. Suu Kyi wouldn’t have
minded: during the campaign, she urged supporters to vote for the party,
not the candidate.
More than 90 parties campaigned for seats in parliament. (One-quarter
of the legislature is reserved for the military.) But in Rangoon one
party dominated conversations. Hein Wai Lin, a seaman who has traveled
the globe for seven years, arrived home on Sunday morning, after having
raced from Shanghai to Hong Kong to Rangoon in order to vote. “We need
the NLD to win,” he said, looking at his two-month-old son whom he had
just met for the first time hours before. “We want our children to have a
good future.”
A single election will not ensure that, especially given the
impediments to democratic rule the junta has woven into Burma’s
seven-year-old constitution. The results of Sunday’s balloting are not
even in, nor is a full judgment on how free and fair the elections were.
Still, Sunday was a time for NLD supporters in Rangoon to celebrate.
“This day is very historic,” said Suu Kyi’s longtime cook, Myint Soe. “I
am so happy my heart is quivering.”
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