Generals' selection: Myanmar's sham poll

缅甸的虚假选举

The Intelligence from The Economist

2025-12-29

21 分钟
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Five years after seizing power in a coup, the military junta in Myanmar is holding an election. Yet all credible opposition has been banned. And war has inspired so many films over the past century. Our correspondents battle it out to pick the best one.  Listen to what matters most, from global politics and business to science and technology—Subscribe to Economist Podcasts+
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  • The Economist.

  • Hello and welcome to the Intelligence from The Economist.

  • I'm Rosie Blau.

  • Every weekday we provide a fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.

  • Just as war is as old as time, so war films are as old as moving pictures.

  • And every age reinvents the genre to reflect its own anxieties.

  • With over a century of war films to choose from, which is the best?

  • Our correspondents fight it out.

  • But first.

  • This weekend voting began in Myanmar's election.

  • It's the first poll since the military junta seized power five years ago.

  • But it's widely viewed as a sham.

  • In the regions and in the cities, rebels have long been trying to oppose the ruling generals.

  • Recently demonstrators in Mandalay staged a protest against the proposed ballot.

  • Their leader was a wiry, bespectacled doctor.

  • I first met Tayzar San about 10 years ago on my first trip to Mandalay.

  • Aaron Connelly is our Asia diplomatic editor.

  • He's a doctor by training,

  • but he was there to introduce me to different people in the city

  • who were working to try and bridge relations between Muslims and Buddhists