Burma is finalizing arrangements Saturday for Sunday's historic election when pro-democracy campaigner Aung San Suu Kyi, who was under house arrest just over a year ago, is likely to be voted into parliament in the military-dominated country.
Her participation in the polling has been made possible by a fragile detente with a government that has embarked on surprising democratic reforms over the last several months.
Sunday's vote is for only a small minority of seats in national and regional legislatures, but it has not diminished the outpouring of enthusiasm for Aung San Suu Kyi – whom the government tried to silence for two decades – and her National League for Democracy party.
The Nobel Peace laureate said Friday she does not expect Burma's election to be fair, but still significant.