The Burmese Embassy in Singapore has sent a letter to Burmese citizens urging them to vote absentee in the constitutional referendum from April 25 to 29, while an anonymous telephone message is urging people to vote "No."
"We the Burmese people can vote "No" at the Myanmar [Burma] embassy…. Please pass this message to all your friends and take this exercise seriously for our freedom," says the telephone message, which is being widely distributed in the Burmese community.
The embassy letter sent to Burmese citizens was dated April 10, urging them to bring their Burmese passport or citizen documents as identification. An estimated 50,000 Burmese citizens live in Singapore.
"The letter was signed by Kyaw Swe Tint, the Burmese counselor," said a Burmese man from Tuas South on the outskirts of Singapore, who received a letter on Thursday.
He said the letter was sent by air mail to Burmese citizens who paid their income tax at the embassy.
Ko Hla, an information technology engineer in Singapore, said Burmese citizens are likely to vote "No" on the referendum or to not vote.
"I haven't heard of anyone who will give a 'Yes' vote," Ko Hla told The Irrawaddy on Thursday.
"As a Burmese citizen, the constitutional referendum is important for me to vote," said Myo Htet a construction engineer in Singapore. "Even the people inside Burma will vote 'No.' Why can't I vote 'No' too?"
A worker at a Singapore shipping yard said he will not go to the embassy to vote.
"I get no leave from my boss, so I can't," he said.
Meanwhile, the Burmese Embassy in the United States of America is collecting names of people eligible to vote based on an income tax list.
Millions of migrants live outside of Burma, but the Burmese regime has not yet announced whether they all will be allowed to vote in the referendum. More than one million Burmese migrants live in Thailand.
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