DHAKA: Residents of Myanmar’s commercial hub Yangon went to the polls on Saturday for the first municipal elections in six decades, with voters hoping for change as the city booms, despite knowing little about the candidates or their policies.
The election will be closely watched as a test of the country’s democratic credentials ahead of a landmark nationwide poll slated for November next year.
For many the ballot for the Yangon City Development Committee (YCDC) is the first chance to vote under the country’s quasi-civilian government, which replaced outright military rule in 2011.
It is also a rare opportunity to have a say over the future of Myanmar’s biggest city, where residents grumble about runaway construction and soaring rents, worsening traffic, poor sanitation and weak pollution control.
‘It’s very difficult to have big expectations as this is the first YCDC election for 60 years,’ Khin Maung Tun, 50, a resident in Thaketa township told the media, reports The Straits Times.
‘But we came here to vote and show our spirit.’
BDST: 1542 HRS, DEC 27, 2014