Outskirts coerced, downtown free to cast "No"
On the day of constitutional referendum, while urban people in Tachilek, eastern Shan State, were free to vote as they wished, people in the surrounding areas were forced by the authorities to support the junta charter, according to local sources.
By
Hseng Khio Fah
Junta authorities in Tachilek held the referendum on 10 May, from 6:00 to 16:00
and allowed people to vote as they wished, said a shopkeeper in Tachilek.
"Many people went to vote, because we could vote what we wanted. No one
came and watched us," she added.
Most people in downtown areas cast "No" votes. "All members from
my family voted No including our friends from civil services," said the
shopkeeper.
Similarly, people in Markka Hokham, Talaw, Sansai Tai, Sansai Leu, Tawkaw Nai
and Tawkaw Nawk were also free to cast vote as they wished.
Meanwhile, authorities in Mongphong, outside Tachilek had announced in Burmese
that people were free to vote according to the rules, but the translator said
in Shan that, "People who vote No will be imprisoned." People were
afraid and cast "Yes" votes, said a villager.
"Most people in the surrounding areas don't know Burmese. That's why they
just followed what they were told in Shan. Nobody wants to support the
dictators who always suppress people. However, to live is more important,"
said another villager.
In Hawngleuk, just outside Tachilek, people were given ballot papers already
ticked. They only had to cast the ballot papers.
In Markyang, near Hawngleuk, the voters only needed to show their serial
numbers to the polling station officials, who ticked and cast the ballot papers
by themselves.
Concerning the referendum, a Shan activist criticized, "The junta doesn't
care whatever the people voted. They themselves will decide whether or not to
approve the charter."

