BANGKOK — Myanmar's military-appointed election body has begun announcing the winners of the first phase of its three-part general election, saying that the military-backed party has won the majority of seats, as widely expected.
Critics of the current system say that the election is designed to add a facade of legitimacy to the status quo. They charge the polls are neither free nor fair because of the exclusion of major parties and government repression of dissenters. Opposition groups have called for a boycott by voters.
The military government said Wednesday that more than 6 million people — about 52% of the more than 11 million eligible voters in the first phase of elections held Dec. 28 — cast ballots, calling the turnout a decisive success.
The Union Election Commission, or UEC, announced in the state-run Myanma Alinn newspaper on Saturday that the Union Solidarity and Development Party, or USDP, won 38 seats in the 330-seat Pyithu Hluttaw lower house, though many seats from the election held on Dec.28 have yet to be declared.
A separate announcement named USDP's leader, Khin Yi, as the winning representative from his constituency in the capital, Naypyitaw. He is a former general and police chief, widely regarded as a close ally of the military ruler, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing. It says he won 49,006 of the 68,681 votes cast.
The Shan Nationalities Democratic Party and the Mon Unity Party got one seat each, according to the UEC statement.
Saturday's announcement was still a partial result, but the USDP's leaders were convinced of success for the first phase.
A senior official of the USDP told The Associated Press on Saturday that the party has won 88 seats of the total 102 contested in the first phase.