Story highlights
Aung San Suu Kyi tells BBC she expects her party to get about 75% in parliament vote
It has dominated the results so far announced, but hundreds more are still to be declared
The historic vote is seen as a test of the powerful military's acceptance of democracy
Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi won a seat in Myanmar’s parliamentary elections as her National League for Democracy party laid claim to nearly 90% of the seats in early results.
The National Election Commission said Wednesday the NDL has won 163 of the 182 seats declared so far in the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw, the country’s parliament.
Confident in the returns, Suu Kyi told the BBC Tuesday that the NDL is on a winning track.
It will take at least two weeks to tabulate all the results, a presidential spokesman told CNN.
Landmark elections in Myanmar
Already, the military-aligned ruling party has admitted it has lost more seats than it has won. But the scale of its losses and the NLD’s victories is still emerging.
The results on hundreds more seats have yet to come in.
Jubilant scenes
NLD supporters gathered amid jubilant scenes outside the party’s Yangon headquarters, in anticipation of a historic, landslide victory in Myanmar, which previously was called Burma.
Music played as they waved flags bearing the NLD’s golden peacock emblem; many wore T-shirts emblazoned with pictures of Suu Kyi.
“We believe we can win,” Ayea Nyeian Thu, a doctor, told CNN at the rally. “We don’t want to see a military government any longer.”
The landmark election is seen as a test of the powerful Myanmar military’s willingness to let the country continue along a path toward full democracy, after decades of military-dominated rule.
The ruling party of Thein Sein has promised the outcome of Sunday’s vote will be respected, but the system is already configured strongly in favor of the military, which gets to appoint a quarter of all lawmakers in the two houses of parliament.
That means the NLD would need to win more than two-thirds of the remaining seats in each house to secure majorities.
What’s at stake in Myanmar’s elections?
The public is electing 168 of the 224 representatives in the upper house of the national parliament, with the remaining quarter of the seats reserved for lawmakers appointed by the military.
In the lower house, 325 of the 440 seats are up for grabs. Another 110 are reserved for military appointees, while voting has reportedly been canceled in the remaining five electable lower house seats because of security concerns.
Free and fair?
The changes ushered in under Thein Sein since 2011 have helped reduce the country’s international isolation, with Western sanctions being eased and foreign investment starting to ramp up.
But human rights groups have warned more recently of a rise in politically motivated arrests, as well as discrimination directed against the Muslim minority, notably the stateless Rohingya population.
Questions have come up over how free and fair Sunday’s election will turn out to be. Suu Kyi, the daughter of an independence leader, expressed concern last week about irregularities in advance voting, fraud and intimidation.
Many people still remember the last national election her party contested, in 1990. It was widely considered to have won that one, but the military rulers annulled the results and placed Suu Kyi and many of her colleagues under arrest.
She spent much of the next two decades under house arrest, becoming an internationally recognized symbol of democracy and the country’s most popular politician.
On Tuesday, she told the BBC that she doesn’t expect a repeat of 1990.
“The times are different. The people are different,” Suu Kyi said, describing citizens as “very much more alert to what is going on around them.”
Nonetheless, hundreds of thousands of people in Myanmar are disenfranchised, including Rohingya Muslims in the west of the country, who are denied citizenship, and residents of conflict zones where the election commission canceled voting.
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After the outcome of the parliamentary vote is decided, lawmakers will begin the complex process of choosing a president.
In pictures: Aung San Suu Kyi
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has described Sunday’s elections as “an important step forward” but also cautioned that what happens next is key to Myanmar’s future.
Suu Kyi said last week she would be “above the President” if her party won the parliamentary election.
Complicating any efforts to change the rules in the future, the military also has an effective veto over any proposed constitutional changes.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has described Sunday’s elections as “an important step forward” but also cautioned that what happens next is key to Myanmar’s future.
“A peaceful post-election period is crucial for stability and maintaining the confidence of the people in the credibility of the electoral process and the overall political transition,” he said in a statement.
CNN’s Ivan Watson and Pamela Boykoff reported from Yangon; Jethro Mullen wrote from Hong Kong. Tim Hume and Manny Maung contributed to this report.