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Myanmar citizens holding flags at a Mandalay rally with soldiers observing in the background
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Ballots Without Hearts: Myanmar's Military Junta Stages Controversial Dec 28 Election

2 min readSource

On Dec 28, 2025, Myanmar's military junta begins a multi-stage election amid a civil war. With Aung San Suu Kyi jailed and opposition dissolved, PRISM explores why this 'sham' vote is happening and the role of China.

They'll vote, but they won't do it with their hearts. On December 28, 2025, the people of Myanmar will head to the polls for the first time since the military seized power in a coup nearly five years ago. What’s being framed as a return to democracy is widely condemned as a sham designed to legitimize a regime responsible for a devastating civil war.

A Climate of Fear and Surveillance

In Mandalay, campaign rallies for the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) are hollow affairs. According to BBC reports, crowds of 300 to 400 people, many of whom are earthquake victims hoping for handouts, sit silently under the watchful eyes of plain-clothes military intelligence officers. The atmosphere isn't one of political engagement, but of survival.

The junta has criminalized dissent with extreme severity. This month, activists were charged under new laws that forbid any speech intended to 'destroy' the electoral process. In Yangon, three young people received sentences of up to 49 years just for posting stickers that paired a bullet with a ballot box. "We have no choice," one fish seller told reporters, echoing the nationwide sentiment of intimidation.

The General's Gambit and Chinese Support

The election is taking place in three stages over a month, but voting is impossible in nearly half the country still consumed by active conflict. The National League for Democracy (NLD)—the winner of the 2020 election—has been dissolved, and its leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, remains imprisoned.

Despite international condemnation, China has provided technical and financial backing for the exercise. For Min Aung Hlaing, the junta leader, this election is a desperate bid for legitimacy. With his army regaining some ground thanks to new Russian and Chinese weaponry, he hopes a manufactured parliamentary victory will dilute the pressure of his catastrophic five-year rule, even as the UN monitors a death toll that has reached 90,000.

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