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Default Myanmar sets late January date for final election round
Old 16 Hours Ago   #1
sunshine1104
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Myanmar’s military junta has officially scheduled the third and final stage of its controversial national elections for January 25, 2026. This announcement, made by the junta-controlled Union Election Commission, comes as the country prepares for the first phase of voting this coming Sunday, followed by a second round on January 11.

The final round of balloting is slated to occur in 63 of the nation’s 330 townships. However, the fragmented schedule highlights the military's lack of control over vast swaths of the country, as ethnic minority armies and pro-democracy resistance fighters have seized significant territory since the 2021 coup.

International observers and democracy advocates have largely dismissed the election as a "charade" designed to provide a thin veneer of legitimacy to military rule. The United Nations and various human rights organizations have criticized the junta for a brutal pre-election crackdown on dissent, noting that the political environment is far from free or fair.

The current political landscape is marked by the absence of the National League for Democracy (NLD), the party led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. After the NLD won a landslide victory in 2020, the military, led by Min Aung Hlaing, seized power under the pretext of voter fraud. The NLD has since been forcibly dissolved, and Suu Kyi remains in prison.

The junta has implemented draconian laws to ensure the election proceeds without interference. Legislation now exists that punishes any public protest or criticism of the voting process with up to ten years in prison. Monitors suggest the candidate lists are almost exclusively comprised of military allies or vetted pro-junta figures.

Despite Min Aung Hlaing’s claims that the polls represent a return to democratic norms and an invitation for rebels to seek peace, the civil war continues to intensify. Many activists who once led peaceful protests have joined armed resistance groups, viewing the election not as a path to peace, but as a strategic maneuver by a military that has ruled Myanmar for most of its modern history.
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