blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 

Myanmar's Suu Kyi gets 18 months under house arrest
Posted: 11 August 2009 1454 hrs

  Aung San Suu Kyi
 
Photos  of

   
 
Related News
Myanmar warns against riots
US calls for Aung San Suu Kyi's unconditional release
US man in Myanmar's Suu Kyi trial suffers more fits
UN presses Myanmar to free Aung San Suu Kyi
US extends Myanmar sanctions ahead of Suu Kyi's verdict


YANGON: Myanmar democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi was Tuesday ordered to stay under house arrest for 18 months after a prison court convicted the Nobel laureate at the end of her internationally condemned trial.

The court at Yangon's Insein jail sentenced her to three years imprisonment and hard labour for breaching the terms of her house arrest following an incident in which a US man swam to her lakeside residence in May.

The head of the ruling military governmtn signed a special order commuting the sentence and allowing the frail 64-year-old to serve out just a year and half under house arrest, Home Affairs Minister General Maung Oo said outside the court.

The ruling means that she will still be in detention during multi-party elections promised by the iron-fisted military government next year. Her party won a landslide victory in the country's last democratic polls.

American John Yettaw, 54, the man who swam to her house, was sentenced to a total of seven years hard labour and imprisonment on three separate charges but it was not clear if the terms would run consecutively or concurrently.

Security forces sealed off the area around the notorious jail and the government allowed diplomats from all foreign embassies in Yangon and local journalists to attend the hearing, officials and witnesses said.

Suu Kyi has already been in detention for 14 of the past 20 years since Myanmar's ruling military government refused to recognise her National League for Democracy's landslide victory in elections in 1990.

It was not clear whether she would serve the new period in detention at her crumbling lakeside villa or at another location.

State-run newspapers carried a commentary Tuesday that warned Suu Kyi's supporters not to cause trouble and told foreign countries not to meddle in Myanmar's affairs.

"The people who favour democracy do not want to see riots and protests that can harm their goal," said the version in the government mouthpiece New Light of Myanmar.

"Nevertheless, some persons who do not want national interest are resorting to a variety of means to disrupt the national goal, taking full advantage of the trial against Daw Aung San Suu Kyi."

Critics had accused the military government of using the charges as an excuse to keep her locked up for the elections due in 2010, particularly as they were lodged just days before the latest period of her house arrest was due to expire.

The military has ruled the impoverished nation with an iron fist since 1962.

Her lawyers argued during the trial that she could not be held responsible for Yettaw's actions, and that the legal framework for her initial detention at her house was under a 1975 law that has been superseded by later constitutions.

Suu Kyi told the court that she did not report the American to the authorities for humanitarian reasons. The military government says she gave food, shelter and assistance to Yettaw, who has diabetes.

Yettaw, a Mormon whose teenage son died two years ago in a motorbike crash, had testified that he swam to her house after receiving a "message from God" that he must protect Suu Kyi against a terrorist plot to assassinate her.

Yettaw got three years for breaching security laws, three years for immigration violations and one year for a municipal charge of illegal swimming.

The case has drawn international outrage at Myanmar's military government, which is already under stiff US and European Union sanctions. Diplomats said that the EU was set to impose further restrictions in the case of a guilty verdict.

But the reclusive Than Shwe has resisted all calls for Suu Kyi's release, and he snubbed UN chief Ban Ki-moon's requests to visit the opposition leader in jail when Ban visited Myanmar in July.

Ban is set to meet a 14-nation advisory group on Myanmar that includes the United States, Britain, Russia and China next month on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

Democratic US Senator Jim Webb is due to visit Myanmar later this month -- the first US lawmaker to visit the country in more than 10 years.

- AFP/yb

 


Other asiapacific News
Pakistan PM's contempt appeal rejected
UN envoy to hold talks in Maldives
Protesters in Malaysia denounce Syrian violence
Malaysia to help Philippines identify dead militants
Umar Patek Bali bombings accused on trial Monday
Biden meets Chinese activists ahead of VP visit
Death toll in Philippine quake rises to 39
Aussie abattoir shuts down over animal abuse
2 Tibetan protesters "shot dead"
Malaysian police detain Saudi tweeter
Iran, free trade pact top EU-India summit agenda
Japan institution releases China Security Report
Japan braces for more snow
US recognises new government of Maldives
Japan mayor slams US base deal
'Don't talk to editors', Australia MPs told
'Dr Death' appeals Australia jail sentence
Arrest warrant for Maldives ex-president
Police chief defection rumours spark China intrigue

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions