BANGKOK — Myanmar's military government began a nationwide census Tuesday, saying it will be used to compile voter lists for a general election promised for next year, even though much of the country is engulfed in civil war.
The census is widely seen as an effort to gather information to closely monitor opponents of military rule even more.
Census enumerators, mostly schoolteachers and local administrative workers, went door-to-door in the capital, Naypyitaw, accompanied by soldiers and police.
State television MRTV reported Tuesday evening the census had been carried out in all 14 of the country's regions and states, and the initial collected data is hoped to be released by the end of this year.
A group that leads the struggle against military rule, the shadow National Unity Government, has advised people to use ''caution'' in complying with the survey.
''Whether they are doing it for the fake elections or census, they are doing it to terrorize the people, so don't collaborate with them in these matters,'' said Kyaw Zaw, a spokesperson for the National Unity Government. ''I would like to say that all those who cooperate with the military council will be punished according to the law because their action is similar to encouraging and cooperating with the military's terrorist activities.''
Pro-democracy guerrillas have also warned that those who help collect information will face reprisals.
The Chin Brotherhood Alliance, which comprises five ethnic Chin militias from the northwestern Chin state, and the Dawei Defense Team, a group from the southern Tanintharyi region, warned in statements last month that they will take strong action against military government personnel who participate in the survey.