YANGON, Dec 27, (AFP) - Residents of Myanmar's
commercial hub Yangon went to the polls Saturday for the first municipal
elections in six decades, with voters hoping for change as the city booms,
despite knowing little about the candidates or their policies.
The election will be closely watched as
a test of the country's democratic credentials ahead of a landmark nationwide
poll slated for November next year.
For many the ballot for the Yangon City
Development Committee is the first chance to vote under the country's
quasi-civilian government, which replaced outright military rule in 2011.
It is also a rare opportunity to have a
say over the future of Myanmar's biggest city, where residents grumble about
runaway construction and soaring rents, worsening traffic, poor sanitation and
weak pollution control.
"It's very difficult to have big
expectations as this is the first YCDC election for 60 years," Khin Maung
Tun, 50, a resident in Thaketa township told AFP. "But we came here to
vote and show our spirit."
But curbs on who can vote have
enfranchised just 400,000 of the city's several million residents, while other
clauses have strictly controlled who can stand for the YCDC.
Just under 300 candidates, among them
businessmen, retired civil servants and activists, are competing for 115
positions on the committee -- although the top posts will remain largely
appointed.
Campaigns were muted -- or non-existent
-- in a country where politicians are unused to wooing the electorate, although
election officials were on hand to help with the queries over ballot sheets
available at polling stations across Yangon early Saturday.
- Turn up and vote -Despite the lack of
intimacy with the candidates' politics, many residents appeared determined to
vote after years of repressed democratic aspirations under junta rule.
"I do not know anything about
candidates. I just found out their names while voting," Phone Maw Lynn, a
resident in Sanchaung township told AFP after voting."I hope for some
significant change by voting," he said without revealing who he voted for.
Polling officials said the election --
which ends before dusk -- will be free and fair, in a break from the junta
years."We will count the votes in front of witnesses sent by candidates.
If the voters also want to come and see, they can do so," Tin Soe, a
polling monitoring official in Sanchaung township told AFP.
The polls are only the second major vote
since the 2010 general elections, which were marred by widespread accusations
of cheating and the absence of Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition party which
boycotted the election.
By-elections in 2012 held in a handful
of constituencies across the country were considered much freer and allowed the
veteran democracy campaigner Suu Kyi to enter parliament for the first time.
But she remains barred from running for
president under the current constitution, although her National League for
Democracy party are pressing hard for an amendment.
The NLD is expected to sweep next year's
poll, following up on its 2012 success.But critics say the Yangon poll is
deeply flawed, citing the rule of just one person per household allowed to vote
-- meaning only around 400,000 people can cast a ballot -- narrow age
restrictions for candidates and a ban on political parties from taking part.
Appointed figures will still outnumber
elected ones on the city's top council within the YCDC, which has major
responsibilities over infrastructure, heritage and tax collection in Yangon.But
it marks a major step by the body, which has not been chosen by popular ballot
since 1949.
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