A new constitution had been overwhelming approved by voters
in last weekend’s referendum after the cyclone disaster that hit Burma, killing
more than 40,000 people.
The government portrayed the vote as a step toward democracy
and to promised multiparty elections from 2010.
The commission in charge of the Saturday referendum said
92.4% of voters approved the constitution, state-run media reported.
Voting was postponed in the country’s largest city, Yangon, which was affected by the tropical cyclone. The
Burmese leadership previously declared it would postpone the constitutional
referendum in hard hit areas of Rangoon
and the Irawaddy River Delta. Residents of the storm-ravaged areas are
scheduled to vote on May 24.
The official death toll from the cyclone has been raised at
43,318, the government said.
The UN and European Union had sent officials to Yangon, also
known as Rangoon, to try to persuade the
military regime to allow foreign teams and equipment into Myanmar, to
cooperate and open up a comprehensive foreign aid program. Burmese government
officials said that are willing to accept international aid.
“The main thing that is emphasised is that this is a
humanitarian issue and it should not be politicised, and that is the view of
everyone,” the Burmese ambassador to the UN, Kyaw Tint Swe said.
The UN’s humanitarian chief, John Holmes, applied to enter Myanmar aboard
a U.N. World Food Program plane carrying supplies, but had not received a visa,
UN spokeswoman Michelle Montas said, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Under the new constitution, the military will have a leading
role in choosing the president and will have veto power over future
constitutional changes.