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Home News Politics

Polls Open in Second Phase of Myanmar Junta-run Election

AFP by AFP
January 11, 2026
in Politics
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Polls Open in Second Phase of Myanmar Junta-run Election

People wait to vote at a polling station during the second phase of Myanmar's general election at Kawhmu township in Yangon on January 11, 2026. / AFP

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KAWHMU, Myanmar—Myanmar’s junta opened polls in the second phase of elections on Sunday, AFP journalists saw, continuing a vote democracy watchdogs say is letting the military prolong its rule in a civilian guise.

The armed forces have ruled Myanmar for most of its post-independence history, before a decade-long democratic thaw saw civilians take the reins in a burst of reform.

But the military snatched back power in a 2021 coup, voiding the results of the previous election, detaining democratic figurehead Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and plunging Myanmar into civil war.

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Polls opened at 6:00 am in Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s former constituency of Kawhmu, around 25 kilometres (16 miles) south of Yangon city, AFP journalists saw.

After ruling by force for the past five years, the junta has pledged the three-phase election, due to end on January 25, will return power to the people.

But the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) — described by many analysts as the military’s prime proxy — won nearly 90 percent of lower house seats in the first phase late last month.

With Daw Aung San Suu Kyi sidelined and her massively popular party dissolved, democracy advocates say the vote has been rigged by a ballot stacked with military allies and a crackdown on dissent.

“I think the results lie only in the mouth of the military,” said one 50-year-old resident of Yangon, where voting also takes place on Sunday, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

Polling is not taking place in large enclaves carved out by rebel factions, who the military accused of staging drone, rocket and bomb attacks on the weekend of the election’s first phase, killing five people.

‘Little interest’

Analysts say the junta is staging the election to launder its image — thereby improving diplomatic relations, increasing foreign investment and sapping momentum from rebels.

“It should surprise no one that the military-backed party has claimed a landslide victory in the first round of the election,” UN rights expert Tom Andrews said in a statement on Thursday.

“The junta engineered the polls to ensure victory for its proxy, entrench military domination in Myanmar, and manufacture a facade of legitimacy while violence and repression continue unabated.”

The first phase had a turnout of around 50 percent, far below the roughly 70 percent of the 2020 vote backing Suu Kyi’s party into office.

“The people have very little interest in this election,” said the 50-year-old Yangon resident. “This election has absolutely nothing to do with escaping this suffering.”

The military justified its 2021 coup with allegations that Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party won a landslide victory over pro-military parties in 2020 polls with massive voter fraud.

Election monitors say those claims were unfounded.

Parties that won 90 percent of seats in 2020 — including the NLD — are not on the ballot for this vote after being dissolved, according to the Asian Network for Free Elections.

Regardless of the vote, a quarter of parliamentary seats will be reserved for the armed forces under the terms of a constitution drafted during a previous stint of military rule.

Limited electorate

Meanwhile more than 330 people are being pursued under junta-enacted laws, including clauses punishing protest or criticism of the poll with up to a decade in prison.

More than 22,000 political prisoners are languishing in junta jails, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners advocacy group.

In the coup’s wake, security forces put down pro-democracy protests — but activists formed ragtag guerrilla units, often fighting alongside ethnic minority armies long resistant to central rule.

Voting has been cancelled in dozens of lower house constituencies, many known battlegrounds or regions where rebels run parallel administrations beyond the junta’s reach.

While there is no official toll for Myanmar’s civil war, monitoring group ACLED — which tallies media reports of violence — estimates that 90,000 people have been killed on all sides.

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