Burma held a rare election to approve a new army-drafted constitution on Saturday while many of the 1.5 million survivors of a devastating cyclone waited in vain for a concerted aid effort to bring them food and medicine.
Though nervous voters were under orders to vote "yes" to a constitution that will enshrine a dominant role for the ruling military, it was the first real election in nearly two decades.
Army-controlled MRTV ran a final Burmese-style "get the vote out" propaganda blitz featuring jaunty actresses singing "Let's go voting" and "Come along for voting" to a boppy disco beat.
While the junta relentlessly focused on the poll, thousands of survivors of the cyclone that hammered Burma a week ago waited for food, medicine and shelter.
Ten thousand hungry and bedraggled refugees have turned up in Myaung Mya, west of Yangon, and their numbers were swelling by the day despite a lack of food and shelter, an aid volunteer said on Saturday.
The government has provided no help and the town cannot cope, residents say. "We have 900 people here but we only have 300 lunch boxes. We gave it to the women and children first. The men still have not had any food," the aid volunteer told Reuters.
PROTESTS AGAINST REFERENDUM
Protesters in Japan, Malaysia and Thailand denounced the junta for holding the referendum in disregard for the suffering of what the United Nations has estimated to be 1.5 million "severely affected" cyclone survivors.
"People are dying and they still want to go on with this artificial democracy," said Than Tun Aung, a refugee who led the protest in Kuala Lumpur.
Even before Cyclone Nargis hit on the night of May 2, groups opposed to military rule, and foreign governments led by the United States, had denounced the vote as an attempt by the military to legitimise its 46-year grip on power.
The government's feeble response to the disaster has only fed cynicism about the junta's determination to proceed with their "roadmap to democracy" leading to multi-party elections in 2010.
The United Nations appealed for $187 million in aid, even though it is still not confident the food, water and tents flown in will make it to those most in need because of the junta's reluctance to admit international relief workers.













