Yangon, Myanmar(CNN) Results from Myanmar's landmark vote are expected to be announced early this week, as the party of veteran democracy campaigner Aung San Suu Kyi seeks a bigger role in the political process.
Millions of Burmese took to the polls Sunday in an election billed as the country's freest vote in a quarter-century.
Victory for Suu Kyi's party, the National League for Democracy, would weaken the power of the military-linked party, which is led by President Thien Sein, a former general.
In Yangon, the country's largest city, people lined up at polling stations before sunrise.
The long wait was a cause for concern for Aung Kyaw San, an election observer for the National Youth Congress, a civil society group.
"It isn't right for someone to have to wait more than one hour in line to vote," he said.
Hlaing Myint, a sales manager, waited for five hours, but said it was worth it.
"This is the only way to change things," he said. He said the new government's focus should be on improving education, health care and economic growth.
"And we need law and order," he added.
Opposition leader and Nobel laureate Suu Kyi also cast her vote Sunday.
Just before the polls closed, voters dashed in under pouring rain to cast last-minute ballots as election officials used a megaphone to announce time was running out.
At a monastery that served as a polling station, voters, journalists and election workers were barefoot as part of Buddhist tradition. As soon as polls closed at 4 p.m. local time, a padlock clicked shut at the gate.
Cautious optimism
Zaw Win, a retired supervisor of engineers, lined up at daybreak for his chance to vote. Now 67, he was a high school student when he experienced his first military coup. He tells CNN he's been through "so many kinds of government."
But he is optimistic that this time, his vote will matter.
"Now I vote for the party and for the person I like, he said. "So I am quite happy."
As he showed off his ink-stained finger -- a mark election organizers are using to prevent people from voting more than once -- he said the process was reassuringly straightforward.
"Before, I was worried about the election. But it was very easy."
Many people appeared to be coming to vote as families.
Su Hnin Kyu, 20, came to vote with her parents and two older brothers, and the family reveled in the holiday-like atmosphere. Her brother, Thet Naing, 23, said he was voting for the first time.
The family enthusiastically supported Aung San Suu Kyi.
Thet Naing said he would be happy if Suu Kyi's NLD wins the election, but also expressed concern about the possibility of rigging.
"If it's not clean we will be sad," he said.
Landmark elections in Myanmar
A woman casts her vote in a polling station in Naypyidaw, Myanmar, on Sunday, November 8.
A woman's finger is dipped in ink after casting her ballot in Dala, a village outside of Yangon, Myanmar, on November 8.
People rally outside the National League for Democracy office after Myanmar's first free and fair election in 25 years on November 8 in Yangon.
Votes are counted in a polling station in Yangon on November 8.
A vendor reads a local weekly journal showing a portrait of Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, President Thein Sein and others.
Pro-democracy supporters are optimistic that the election could be the beginning of real change in the country, which has been isolated for decades because of its repressive military-dominated government.
Tin Aye, chairman of Myanmar's Union Election Commission, inspects a polling station in Naypyidaw on November 7.
Thu Ryain Shwe, 26, of the National Unity Party, one of the youngest candidates in the parliamentary election, wears his candidate ID in Zigon.
A devotee prays at a chanting ceremony in Mandalay, Myanmar, on November 7 to bless citizens and to pray for a fair and peaceful election.
A supporter of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party holds a party flag in Mandalay on November 5.
Still skeptical
Blogger, anti-hate speech campaigner and NLD candidate Nay Phone Latt, however, was maintaining a degree of skepticism. He told CNN that the party had monitored some irregularities, and had noted minor incidents of violence and attempted voter fraud.
He added that it is the rural areas where the opportunities for foul play would be most evident.
"I am not so worried for the downtown area (of Yangon)," he said.
"But I'm not so sure for the remote area. All of the media and all of the observers everybody should focus on some of the place in the remote area."
Sense of belief
Pro-democracy supporters are optimistic the election could be the beginning of real change in the country, which has been isolated for decades due to its repressive military-dominated government.
While the administration of current President Thein Sein has relaxed restrictions, pushing through expansive political and economic reforms and bringing the country out of decades of authoritarian rule and international isolation, watchers say that the elections are still far from free and fair.
Not least is the bloc of seats in the Hluttaw, Myanmar's parliament, which is earmarked for the military. A full quarter of seats are guaranteed for unelected military representatives. These members also have an effective veto over any proposed constitutional change.
Within U.S. government circles, there was some skepticism toward the vote.
"This is not going to be a high-quality election," a senior U.S. government official told CNN, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"The process is going to be fraught ... it is slanted toward the ruling elite."
Military mood subdued
The mood was less festive at a military hospital in Yangon that serves as a polling station for around 1,200 military doctors, nurses and relatives of hospital staff.
A plainclothes man identifying himself as an officer in the special branch security intelligence arm of the police accompanied CNN during its tour of the polling station.
When CNN approached voters to ask about the election, the unnamed officer shook his head at them. The voters then declined to be interviewed.
An official from the Union Election Commission, the body that oversees the vote, insisted that this election was much better than parliamentary elections in 2010, which were boycotted by the National League for Democracy.
"There are more people this time compared to 2010," said Daw Thein Thein Tun, the election official at the facility.
"There is more regulation, and this time there is more openness and transparency," she added. "You see the voting is free and fair."
Barred from presidency
Aung San Suu Kyi
Aung San Suu Kyi poses for a portrait in Yangon, Myanmar, in 2010. A month earlier, she had been released from house arrest.
Suu Kyi, front center, is seen with her parents and her two elder brothers in 1947. Her father, Aung San, was the commander of the Burma Independence Army and helped negotiate the country's independence from Britain. He was assassinated on July 19, 1947. Suu Kyi's mother, Ma Khin Kyi, was a diplomat who was once an ambassador to India.
Suu Kyi poses with Burmese comedian Par Par Lay, who was part of the pro-democracy act "The Moustache Brothers." Suu Kyi grew up in Myanmar and India but moved to England in the 1960s, where she studied at Oxford University. She returned to Myanmar in 1988 and co-founded the National League for Democracy, a political party dedicated to nonviolence and civil disobedience.
Suu Kyi sprinkles water over the heads of her followers during a traditional new year ceremony in Yangon in 1989. Five days of celebrations were marked by anti-government protests closely watched by armed troops.
Suu Kyi poses for a photo in June 1989.
Suu Kyi addresses a crowd of supporters in Yangon in July 1989. About two weeks later, she was placed under house arrest and charged with trying to divide the military. She denied the charges.
While under house arrest, Suu Kyi won the Nobel Peace Price in 1991. She was honored "for her non-violent struggle for democracy and human rights."
Suu Kyi speaks to hundreds of supporters from the gate at her residential compound in Yangon in 1995. She had just been released from house arrest, but her political activity was restricted.
Suu Kyi addresses supporters in 1997, on the 49th anniversary of Myanmar's independence movement.
Suu Kyi, in a 1999 home video, gives her support to economic sanctions against her country as a means to affect the governing military.
Suu Kyi poses in front of a portrait of her father in 1999. In 2000, she was once again placed under house arrest.
An activist holds a Suu Kyi portrait during a protest at the Chinese Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2009. The protesters were calling on the Chinese government to impose sanctions on Myanmar's military government following a Suu Kyi trial.
Suu Kyi speaks in Yangon in December 2010, a month after being released from house arrest. She had spent 15 of the previous 21 years under house arrest.
Suu Kyi is held by her son Kim Aris as she is greeted by supporters during a visit to the ancient temple city of Bagan in 2011.
Suu Kyi meets US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at Suu Kyi's residence in Yangon in 2011.
Suu Kyi greets crowds while campaigning in Pathein, Myanmar, in 2012. She was running for a seat in parliament.
Suu Kyi makes her way through a crowd in 2012, a day after she won a seat in parliament. It was Myanmar's first multiparty elections since 1990.
Suu Kyi accepts the Ambassador of Conscience Award next to U2 singer Bono during a European tour in 2012.
Suu Kyi is presented with the Congressional Gold Medal while visiting the US Capitol in 2012.
Suu Kyi meets with US President Barack Obama in the White House Oval Office. Obama later visited her lakeside villa in Myanmar. It was the first visit to Myanmar by a sitting US president.
Suu Kyi joins officer cadets for tea while visiting a military academy in Camberley, England, in 2013.
Suu Kyi speaks during a Nobel lecture in Oslo, Norway, in 2015. She was finally able to receive the Nobel Peace Prize that she won while she was under house arrest in 1991.
Suu Kyi descends from a stage decorated with a portrait of her late father during a campaign rally in 2015.
Suu Kyi campaigns in Kawhmu, Myanmar, in 2015.
Suu Kyi arrives at a polling station to cast her vote in 2015. Her party won a historic majority in the nation's first freely held parliamentary elections. Suu Kyi was not able to become president, however, because of a constitutional amendment that prohibits anyone with foreign relatives from becoming the nation's leader. She was later named state counselor, a role created especially for her.
Suu Kyi and members of parliament take their positions during the presidential vote in Naypyidaw, Myanmar, in 2016. Htin Kyaw, Suu Kyi's longtime aide, was voted as president.
Suu Kyi walks with Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the country's military leader, at the Naypyidaw city airport in 2016.
Suu Kyi and President Kyaw talk at a conference in Naypyidaw in 2016.
Suu Kyi addresses the United Nations General Assembly in New York in 2016.
Supporters rush to greet Suu Kyi in Washington, DC, after she met with US Secretary of State John Kerry in 2016.
Suu Kyi is guided by National Park Service Ranger Heath Mitchell on her visit to Washington, DC, in 2016.
Suu Kyi met with Pope Francis at the Vatican in 2017.
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II greets Suu Kyi ahead of a private lunch at Buckingham Palace in 2017.
US Vice President Mike Pence meets with Suu Kyi on the sidelines of the ASEAN summit in Singapore in 2018.
Suu Kyi stands before the UN's International Court of Justice in 2019. The nation of Gambia filed a lawsuit in the world court
alleging that Myanmar committed "genocidal acts" against Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims. Suu Kyi has repeatedly denied such charges, siding with the military and labeling the accusations as "misinformation."
Suu Kyi casts her ballot during advance voting in 2020.
Suu Kyi watches the vaccination of health workers at a hospital in Naypyidaw in January 2021. A few days later, the military detained her in a coup.
Suu Kyi -- a national hero who spent nearly 15 years under house arrest -- is overwhelmingly her country's most popular politician.
Under the country's military-drafted constitution, she is barred from the presidency due to a rule prohibiting anyone with foreign family members from assuming top office. Suu Kyi's late husband was British, and her two sons have British passports.
The president is not directly elected by the public, but chosen by MPs following the vote. Suu Kyi will stand as an MP, and has hinted at a civilian candidate to put forward for the role.
Suu Kyi says she'd be "above the president" if her party wins Sunday's general elections. She made the comments during a news conference in Yangon on Thursday, and added that there have been irregularities in advance voting, fraud and intimidation -- and that the process was falling short of its billing as Myanmar's first free and fair election in 25 years.
CNN's Ivan Watson and Pamela Boykoff wrote and reported from Yangon, and Euan McKirdy wrote and reported from Hong Kong.