Gulf Today

UN envoy says M yanm ar junta elections will fuel violence

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YANGON: Junta plans for elections in coup-hit Myanmar this year will “fuel greater violence,” a United Nations special envoy said on Tuesday, calling for the internatio­nal community to unite in opposition.

Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military toppled democracy figurehead Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian government almost two years ago, alleging massive fraud during elections her party won in 2020.

The junta-imposed state of emergency is due to expire at the end of January, ater which the constituti­on states authoritie­s must set in motion plans to hold fresh elections.

Any military-run elections “will fuel greater violence, prolong the conflict and make the return to democracy and stability more difficult,” UN special envoy Noeleen Heyzer said in a statement.

She called for the internatio­nal community to “forge a stronger unified position” on the planned polls.

The United States has said any elections would be a “sham.”

Close junta ally Moscow says it supports holding polls.

A spokesman for UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said on Monday he was “concerned by the military’s stated intention to hold elections amid... ongoing arrests, intimidati­on and harassment of political leaders, civil society actors and journalist­s.”

“Without conditions that permit the people of Myanmar to freely exercise their political rights, the proposed polls risk exacerbati­ng instabilit­y,” the statement said.

The junta gave existing and aspiring political parties two months to re-register under a strict new electoral law this month, the latest sign it is planning fresh polls this year.

Observers say the planned poll cannot be free and fair under the present circumstan­ces.

The UN Security Council passed its first resolution on the situation in Myanmar last month, urging the junta to release Suu Kyi and all “arbitraril­y detained prisoners.”

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