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Myanmar will now become a decoracy BEGGAR begging from Bankruprt Ang Mohs

democracy my butt

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http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/suu-kyi-supporters/2247748.html

Suu Kyi supporters confident of landslide win in Myanmar election
Supporters of Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi are confident her party has won a landslide victory in the country's first free general election in 25 years.

POSTED: 09 Nov 2015 11:30 UPDATED: 09 Nov 2015 11:53

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Supporters of Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi's party cheer as they watch vote counts at a polling station on a giant screen outside the party headquarters in Yangon on Nov 8, 2015. (Photo: AFP/Ye Aung THU)

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YANGON: Supporters of Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi were confident on Monday her party had won a landslide victory in the country's first free general election in 25 years, with the biggest question whether the margin was enough to claim the presidency.

Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) was expected to win the largest share of votes cast by an electorate of about 30 million who chose from thousands of candidates standing for parliament and regional assemblies.

"We're leading the race but we can't say for sure we'll win two-thirds of the seats in Parliament that would enable us to form an independent government without forming a coalition," said NLD senior official and spokesman Han Tha Myint.

Electoral authorities will declare rolling results throughout the day on Monday, although a clear picture of the nationwide outcome is not likely before Tuesday.
 

Agoraphobic

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The future is uncertain as Myanmar will be walking on a new path, however, it is more desired than military rule. There will be bumps, but I think it will be a brighter road ahead for them.

Cheers!
 

frenchbriefs

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burmese da best!!!

how is it possible a burmese country achieve independence and democracy way before singapore do?
 

democracy my butt

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What does that Democracy Bitch know other than sucking up Ang Moh's crap?

She can run govt? Lead economy? Command (my ass) Army? Deal diplomacy?
 

democracy my butt

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RULE is simple:

Any country that runs by Democracy Human Rights will end up WEAK AND BANKRUPT, like USA n EU, all full of DEBTS. Also adopting world's most COWARDLY POLICIES. Just definitely a failure in a matter of time perish.

Countries which staves peasants dead deliberately, will be TOUGH n STRONG,impossible to compromise nor get Pushed, Shafted (anal) around by any foreign powers. e.g. NK, war era Vietnam, Mao's era China etc. Able to stand up to any challenge or crisis, no fear nor regret.

Countries that mass executed citizens e.g. USSR Stalin, the West fears like ghost, never will lay a finger on, they only can do Cold War.
 
Last edited:

makapaaa

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ition-confident-suu-kyi-has-won-historic-vote

Myanmar’s Ruling Party Signals Defeat as Suu Kyi Calls for Calm Chris Blake and Philip Heijmans


November 9, 2015 — 1:20 AM HKT Updated on November 9, 2015 — 6:53 PM HKT
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Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar's opposition leader and chairperson of the National League for Democracy.

Photographer: Dario Pignatelli/Bloomberg






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  • USDP co-chair says party lost more seats than it won
  • Victory by Suu Kyi's NLD would end decades of military control

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Myanmar’s ruling party signaled that it may be facing defeat in Sunday’s election to the National League for Democracy led by Aung San Suu Kyi, who told jubilant supporters anticipating an historic victory to remain calm as they awaited official results.
QuickTakeMyanmar’s Transition
The ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party likely lost more seats than it won nationally, Htay Oo, co-chair of the USDP, said in an interview aired by 7 Day Daily local media. Already several key ruling party figures acknowledged defeat. Shwe Mann, the former USDP chairman booted from that position earlier this year in an internal party revolt, conceded. President Thein Sein has yet to comment on the election.





Initial results began trickling in on Monday, showing the NLD picking up the first 12 of the 45 seats tallied for Yangon, the party’s stronghold, though it may be days or weeks before a clear outcome of the election emerges.
"We must cautiously walk forward," Suu Kyi told supporters gathered outside her NLD party’s Yangon headquarters Monday. "Stay peaceful and calm. The winner must be humble and avoid actions that can offend others. Real victory must be for the country, not for a group or individuals."
The spirit of NLD supporters was running high as some 10,000 backers braved heavy rain and danced into the night Sunday sure that a victory -- delayed 25 years by a stolen election -- was just around the corner. Thousands returned to NLD headquarters on Monday to wait for results to start appearing on the election commission’s website.
Suu Kyi, 70, and her party are the longtime foils to the generals who ruled Myanmar from a coup in 1962 until 2011, when they handed power to their political arm after a vote tainted by allegations of fraud and boycotted by the opposition. Her party swept to victory in a landslide 1990 election -- the nation’s last widely contested poll -- only to have the generals ignore the results and plunge Myanmar into another generation of repression and isolation.





[h=3]Opening Industries[/h]Since taking power, President Thein Sein, a member of the former junta, and his government have opened industries such as energy exploration, banking and telecommunications to foreign participation in a bid to bring Myanmar out of economic isolation. Foreign direct investment, led by spending on infrastructure and low-cost manufacturing, surged to $8.1 billion in the fiscal year ended in March, more than 20 times the 2010 level. That jump helped annual economic growth average more than 7 percent since that year. The kyat weakened Monday to a three-week low of 1,288 per dollar after the election.
Suu Kyi has signaled that she would continue the government’s investor-friendly policy and has pledged to improve rule-of-law in the country to better foster investment.
“We do think that the NLD’s victory will provide clarity to foreign
investors as long as it holds and the military/USDP continue to respect the
results,” said Andrew Wood, head of Asia Country Risk at BMI Research.
Thein Sein said before the vote that the military and the government would accept the outcome should the ruling party lose and work with the opposition to ensure a stable transition. Even if the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party were ousted, the military would still retain a significant role in politics because it’s guaranteed 25 percent of seats in parliament as well as control of key ministries under a constitution written by the departing junta.
[h=3]Military Influence[/h]Even if her party wins, Suu Kyi would be barred from becoming president because her children are foreign nationals. She has repeatedly said she plans to find a way to lead the government should her party win, and that the constitution says nothing about someone being “above the president.”
The voting, monitored by thousands of international observers who traveled to Myanmar, appeared to have gone smoothly Sunday, with no reports of violence or visible fraud. Before the vote, the election commission acknowledged that errors on the registration lists were widespread, and it could only guarantee that the lists were 30 percent accurate. It had earlier purged the voter lists of many Muslims, including most of the minority Rohingya, whom rights groups have warned are at risk of genocide.
[h=3]‘Step Forward’[/h]"While these elections were an important step forward, we recognize that they were far from perfect," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Sunday in Washington. "There remain important structural and systemic impediments to the realization of full democratic and civilian government."
The vote is being closely watched in neighboring China and India, which both share extensive borders with the country and are vying for influence as Myanmar opens its economy. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi sees Myanmar as India’s economic gateway to Southeast Asia and backed a plan for trans-national highways and railways that would pass through Myanmar to Thailand and markets beyond.
For China, the country is a key part of President Xi Jinping’s effort to rebuild ancient trade routes to Europe and offers a way to reduce China’s dependence on oil shipped through the Strait of Malacca. China has already financed construction of a natural gas pipeline and oil pipeline that span the country, linking China’s Yunnan province to the Bay of Bengal, where it can load oil and gas from the Middle East.
-1x-1.jpg

National League for Democracy party supporters cheer as they gather outside the party headquarters in Yangon, Myanmar, on Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015. Photographer: Dario Pignatelli/Bloomberg
“China supports the country’s stability and long-term development. China is willing to provide assistance to the election upon request,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said.
Suu Kyi was finally able to vote in the nation her father -- independence hero Aung San -- freed from British rule, after spending the past two general elections under house arrest on the orders of the junta. She was greeted by hundreds of cheering supporters when she arrived to vote at a school in Yangon, the country’s biggest city. Dressed in red -- the color of her party -- she emerged minutes later with a finger dyed by purple ink, before being ushered through a crush of reporters without making any comments.
‘“I believe that there will be change if the NLD wins,” said Khine Nyein Aye, 37, of Insein township in northern Yangon, who was waiting to see if Suu Kyi would speak. ‘‘I think the NLD will win,” she said. “I even now have goose bumps.”
Though more than 90 parties were competing to represent the Southeast Asian nation’s 52 million people in parliament, the vote boiled down to two key choices: Suu Kyi’s party and its message of change, or Thein Sein’s military-backed party and its promise of stability.
Should neither major win a majority, ethnic parties that are expected to do well in border areas might hold the key to determining who becomes president. Myanmar’s president is chosen in a parliamentary vote in which the upper house, lower house and military appointees each put forward a candidate. That vote isn’t expected until early next year.
Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
 

democracy my butt

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Loyal
Myanmar should just shoot that Democracy Barbie Doll tonight and hold martial law as permanent constitution.


Western sanctions surfers only peasants. Does it matter?


If you mass executed the peasants anyway, the West dare not even figure out a way to fix you, they are far too weak and dying themselves any way. Not way have the Ang Mohs even a quater of their strengths in era of Vietnam Wars. They are too chicken and pale now.
 

democracy my butt

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70%: This cannot be true!

30%: No complaint hor!

You dreaming that druglords are going to pay that bitch tax, for her to feed useless peasants?

She would get into the way of druglords businesses and they will just shoot her cunt. You dream the junta army n mata w be loyally saving her ass?

Nothing except a novelty celebration!
 

obama.bin.laden

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Asia Democratization BEST Examples are Iraq and Afghanistan. :biggrin:

Happy Free-Elections!

I can see it coming for Myanmar soon after a very short sweet good life spoiling the Burmese, not more than 2 years:


Democratically Elected Government failed poorly, can not keep a country as one.

1. Separatism Ethical Break Away regions. Ishan, Rohinyas, etc etc, starts armed conflicts and separatism wars.

2. Religious Segregation wars, Buddhism, Islam, Christian, no peaceful unity possible.

3. Drug Wars, druglords armies rebellion control ENLARGED GOLDEN TRIANGLE. Even occupation of ports and border and capital zones, fight each other like in Mexico and Columbia. Guns and RPGs all over the country and corpse fill the land.

4. Mutiny Army control some counties and provinces. Unhappy that army lost political power.

5. Nobody nor soldiers nor funds are loyal to Democratically elected government. Parliament talk cock sing song. Violence takes physical control.

Welcome to new Iraq, Afghan!

Welcome new Buddhism based rabel and Terrorisim!
 

Agoraphobic

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Loyal
I think for the time being, sucking up, and getting sucked in return, is the best choice for them. All the big boys (USA, UK, PRC, Japan) are lining up to get their cocks sucked. US corporations are just waiting to jump into Myanmar to set up shop, and it looks like many other blokes don't want to be to far behind. Even many companies from little Singapore are on the bandwagon.

Cheers!

What does that Democracy Bitch know other than sucking up Ang Moh's crap?

She can run govt? Lead economy? Command (my ass) Army? Deal diplomacy?
 

democracy my butt

Alfrescian
Loyal
All these crisis will automatically vanish, when Democracy Doll Barbie goes up another balcony and gave yet another tourching democracy dream speech. Ang Mohs all clapped hands and hand her yet another Peace Prize.

Problems solved.



Asia Democratization BEST Examples are Iraq and Afghanistan. :biggrin:

Happy Free-Elections!

I can see it coming for Myanmar soon after a very short sweet good life spoiling the Burmese, not more than 2 years:


Democratically Elected Government failed poorly, can not keep a country as one.

1. Separatism Ethical Break Away regions. Ishan, Rohinyas, etc etc, starts armed conflicts and separatism wars.

2. Religious Segregation wars, Buddhism, Islam, Christian, no peaceful unity possible.

3. Drug Wars, druglords armies rebellion control ENLARGED GOLDEN TRIANGLE. Even occupation of ports and border and capital zones, fight each other like in Mexico and Columbia. Guns and RPGs all over the country and corpse fill the land.

4. Mutiny Army control some counties and provinces. Unhappy that army lost political power.

5. Nobody nor soldiers nor funds are loyal to Democratically elected government. Parliament talk cock sing song. Violence takes physical control.

Welcome to new Iraq, Afghan!

Welcome new Buddhism based rabel and Terrorisim!
 
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