Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Burma's vote will 'lack international legitimacy': US


The United States said that elections planned in military-run Burma this year will "lack international legitimacy."

"US believes elections planned for this year in Burma will not be free or fair and will lack international legitimacy," the State Department said on the micro-blogging site Twitter.

US Senator Jim Webb said earlier this month he expected Burma to hold elections on October 10 and urged support for the vote despite the military regime's exclusion of the democratic opposition.

Webb is a leading US advocate for engagement with the junta, although he called off a trip to Burma this month due to allegations the country was developing nuclear weapons with support from North Korea.

Burma plans to hold its first elections in two decades later this year, although the regime has not set an exact date.

The Obama administration last year initiated dialogue with North Korea but has voiced concern about the elections, ahead of which Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy was forcibly dissolved.

Webb acknowledged that the election was designed to preserve the military regime, but said it was a step forward that the country would allow at least some opposition figures to stand for seats.

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