Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition party clinched a historic majority in Myanmar's Parliament on Friday and will likely gain even more seats as poll results continue to trickle in. A look at some of the most important numbers behind the Nov. 8 polls:
— 364: The number of seats Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party has won so far in the 664-seat, two-chamber Parliament. Final results are still being tabulated.
— 329: This has been called the "magic number" — the threshold that Suu Kyi's party needed to secure a simple parliamentary majority.
— 40: The number of seats the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party has won so far.
— More than 500,000: The number of ethnic Rohingya Muslims denied the right to vote by the military-backed government.
— 49: The number of years Myanmar was ruled by a military junta, until the army ceded power in 2011 to a quasi-civilian government led by retired generals.
— 25: The number of years since the last full election in 1990, which the NLD won in a landslide but was not allowed to take power. The ruling junta annulled the results and put Suu Kyi under house arrest.
— 15: The number of years Suu Kyi spent in detention, mostly under house arrest, over a period of 22 years.
— Nov. 13: The day that Suu Kyi was freed from house arrest in 2010 — and the day exactly five years later that her opposition party's parliamentary majority is confirmed on Nov. 13, 2015.
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