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Myanmar to Try Pro-Democracy Leader

AP
posted: 181 DAYS 6 HOURS AGO
comments: 24
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YANGON, Myanmar (May 14) — Myanmar's Nobel Prize-winning pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi faced new charges Thursday, less than two weeks before her house arrest was due to end after an American man swam across a lake and entered her home, her lawyer said.
Supporters accused the military government of using the incident to keep her in detention ahead of general elections scheduled next year.
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Suu Kyi, whose detention was set to end May 27, could face a prison term of up to five years if convicted, said lawyer Hla Myo Myint. The trial is scheduled to start Monday at a special court at Yangon's notorious Insein Prison, where she was arraigned Thursday.
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She is accused of breaking the terms of her detention by harboring the visitor for two days, even though another of Suu Kyi's lawyers said she told the man to leave her home.
"Everyone is very angry with this wretched American. He is the cause of all these problems," lawyer Kyi Win told reporters. "He's a fool."
The junta appears eager to ensure that next year's general elections are carried out without any significant opposition from pro-democracy groups that say the balloting will merely perpetuate military rule under a democratic guise.
Human rights groups said they fear the trial will be used to justify another extension of Suu Kyi's yearslong detention despite international demands for her release. The 63-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate has already spent more than 13 of the last 19 years — including the past six — in detention without trial for her nonviolent promotion of democracy in Myanmar, also called Burma.
The motives of the American, John William Yettaw, 53, of Falcon, Missouri, remained unclear. State television on Thursday said he had served two years in the military and listed his occupation as "student, clinical psychology, Forest Institution."
"I know that John is harmless and not politically motivated in any way," his stepson, Paul Nedrow, wrote in an e-mail to The Associated Press. "He did not want to cause Suu Kyi any trouble."
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Nedrow said he was concerned about his stepfather's health because he was a diabetic and the ailment "could cause him to become disoriented and confused and be unable to make wise choices for himself."
A pro-government Myanmar Web site earlier said that after arriving at Suu Kyi's house, Yettaw told her two female assistants — a mother and daughter who are her sole allowed companions — that he was tired and hungry after the swim and had diabetes.
It said the two women, supporters of Suu Kyi's party, gave him food.
Kyi Win, Suu Kyi's lawyer, told U.S. government-backed Radio Free Asia that Yettaw pleaded with Suu Kyi to let him stay because he felt weak, so she finally let him stay in a downstairs bedroom.
In the past Myanmar's junta — which regards Suu Kyi as the biggest threat to its rule — has found reasons to extend her periods of house arrest, bending the letter of the law.
"The Burmese regime is clearly intent on finding any pretext, no matter how tenuous, to extend her unlawful detention. The real injustice, the real illegality, is that she is still detained in the first place," said British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who wrote a chapter about her in his book "Courage."
Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith described Suu Kyi's arrest as "gravely concerning" and urged her immediate release.
Yettaw, who was arrested last week, was charged at Thursday's hearing with illegally entering a restricted zone, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison, and breaking immigration laws, which is punishable by up to one year in jail, said Hla Myo Myint.
U.S. Embassy spokesman Richard Mei said Yettaw had no legal representation at his arraignment but that the embassy was trying to find him an English-speaking lawyer.
The National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma, which describes itself as the country's government-in-exile, said the junta was using the incident to extend Suu Kyi's detention.
"It is nothing more than a political ploy to hoodwink the international community so that it can keep (Suu Kyi) under lock and key while the military maneuvers its way to election victory on 2010," the group's prime minister, Sein Win, said in a statement.
Suu Kyi has recently been ill, suffering from dehydration and low blood pressure. Her condition improved this week after a visit by a doctor who administered an intravenous drip, said Nyan Win, the spokesman for her National League for Democracy party, who is also part of a team of three lawyers hoping to represent her.
"Please tell them (reporters) I am well," Kyi Win quoted Suu Kyi as saying. But he added: "I am very concerned about Suu Kyi's health, even though she said she is well."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-05-13 19:45:35

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Pidaman

12:02 AMMay 16 2009

I hope in my wildness notions of hope, that this man is part of a secret rescue being formed and that he passed on a messge before being deported and shortly, with the President's approval, special forces will grab all three and take them out. But sadly, America doesn't have the will or the guts for these types of things anymore. Thank God for the Constitution and the Bill-Of-Rights or many of us would be sitting in many American political prisons.

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(1)

RjgCAPUTO

12:15 PMMay 15 2009

Bad Typing, poor spelling. I quess I'm Not the person to talk about it.

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(1)

RjgCAPUTO

12:12 PMMay 15 2009

BUSH THOUGHT IRAQ WAS A GOOD PLACE TO HELP HOPLESS PEOPLE, I QUEST HE COULDN'T SPELL MYANMAR.

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HisMightyLite

07:28 PMMay 14 2009

Ok

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Mkw737

06:29 PMMay 14 2009

Biggest problem for Myanmar's repressive regime: The 21st Century. Everyone can see and condemn what you do -- found a cool site; Balkingpoints ; incredible satellite view of earth

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(3)

CKKJGC

02:01 PMMay 14 2009

SWilli9709, wtf is that supposed to mean? Can't you knee-jerk right-wing dittoheads keep on topic, ever? Perhaps you are obscurely ridiculing the fact that most of the fighters for human rights and freedom around the world are "liberal fools"? Well, thank God the world has them.

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(3)

SWilli9709

01:37 PMMay 14 2009

NO doubt a left wing liberal lawyer. those fools could mess up a free lunch.

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(5)

HsierGirl

12:22 PMMay 14 2009

The UN is a bunch of spineless <female parts> . They are a complete joke. The fact that this "country" has been allowed to continue with blatant heinous human rights violations is proof of how pussified the UN has become._____________No, the article is an excuse to bash everything some posters dislike. This isn't the job of the UN - perhaps you should check it out. There are regimes throughout the world which are just as disfunctional, if not more so. The UN was never meant to go and try to change them all, nor to come to the rescue of every political prisoner.-------- no YOU should check out the issues surrounding BURMA as it was before the current regime took it over and renamed the country, beheaded anyone THAT THEY FELT were in opposition. It IS THE JOB of the UN to ensure that human rights are respected ans they have chosen to be spineless puds and allow terrible atrocities to occur in this country. Just because Burma does not have a GDP that we are interested in taking over...

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Jancf

11:55 AMMay 14 2009

The UN is a bunch of spineless <female parts> . They are a complete joke. The fact that this "country" has been allowed to continue with blatant heinous human rights violations is proof of how pussified the UN has become._____________No, the article is an excuse to bash everything some posters dislike. This isn't the job of the UN - perhaps you should check it out. There are regimes throughout the world which are just as disfunctional, if not more so. The UN was never meant to go and try to change them all, nor to come to the rescue of every political prisoner.

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(1)

Reeltime07

11:14 AMMay 14 2009

Listen up MYANMAR ( I forgot to mention) above all things else....LIBERTY!!!!!De Oppresso Libre

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Detained Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi will be put on trial Thursday in connection with the intrusion of an American who sneaked uninvited into her compound, a spokesman for her party said.