Showing posts with label Insein Prison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insein Prison. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2009

This will sound like appeasement, a strange reward for continued oppression

TO BE NOTED:

"
Burma: aid not sanctions

A year after the cyclone which devastated southern Burma, the pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi was back yesterday in Rangoon's infamous Insein prison facing her accusers again. Having spent 13 of the last 19 years in detention without trial, the charges the Nobel peace prize laureate faces could be dismissed as a technicality. But that would be to misjudge the iron purpose of her enemies.

Neither the cyclone which killed over 140,000 people, the international outrage which followed, nor the 130,000 survivors who struggle on aid rations in makeshift shelters, will divert the junta of General Than Shwe from its purpose – holding rigged elections next year. The last time a free election was allowed by Than Shwe's predecessor Ne Win, Ms Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy won 392 of 492 seats. So there is little prospect, as some had hoped, of the junta releasing Ms Suu Kyi from the house arrest in which she has spent the last six years. Instead, another prison sentence awaits and Ms Suu Kyi's isolation will be as profound as that of the regime.

Just as it was in 1988 when she returned to Burma to nurse her dying mother only to find herself in the middle of an uprising, Ms Suu Kyi is an accidental heroine. She was charged yesterday with violating the terms of her house arrest, as a result of the bizarre actions of a total stranger. One of her lawyers, Kyi Win, described John Yettaw, who swam across a lake to her house, as a wretched American fool. No one seemed to know why he did it; even his stepson was clueless, saying there was no political motivation.

Harmless or not, the military junta has the pretext it has been waiting for. Ms Suu Kyi, aged 63 and in bad health, could face another five years in prison. Her incarceration will renew calls for more sanctions on Burma, oblivious to the fact that this regime thrives on isolation. More than 20 years of sanctions (which the EU extended recently) have merely ensured the Burmese get a fraction of the aid per head that is given to Sudan.

With plentiful supplies of teak and gas, and big neighbours like India and China vying for contracts, the junta has everything it needs. It certainly does not need the support of its population, merely its acquiescence. But isolation has only fuelled the problems of the Burmese people. The only effective response to the continuing catastrophe of last year's cyclone and to the plight of Ms Suu Kyi is to keep the foot of aid in the door – and even to stick it further in. This will sound like appeasement, a strange reward for continued oppression – but not to the farmers whose water buffaloes were drowned by the cyclone and whose rice yields are down to a third because of salinated water. They need aid, not sanctions."

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

tried on charges connected to a US national who intruded into the bungalow where she has been under house arrest for the last six years

TO BE NOTED: From the FT:

"
Suu Kyi faces fresh charges in Burma

By Amy Kazmin in Rangoon

Published: May 14 2009 00:34 | Last updated: May 14 2009 03:45

Burma’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning democracy advocate Aung San Suu Kyi was taken to Rangoon’s notorious Insein Prison on Thursday where she is expected to be tried on charges connected to a US national who intruded into the bungalow where she has been under house arrest for the last six years.

Last week, military authorities said they arrested a man, identified as John Yeattaw, who allegedly swam across Rangoon’s picturesque Inya lake to reach Ms Suu Kyi’s dilapidated waterfront bungalow and stayed there for two days.

The bizarre show of bravado by the American swimmer – about whom little is known – raised concerns within Ms Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy about Ms Suu Kyi’s security.

However, lawyers say authorities are preparing to charge Ms Suu Kyi for violating the terms of her house arrest, which began on May 2003, after an attack on her convoy while she was on a political tour. Two maids, who have been living inside the bungalow with her since her house arrest, are also set to be tried, the lawyers said.

Some of her supporters fear that she could face even more serious charges such as treason.

“We’re extremely concerned,” Benjamin Zawacki, an Amnesty International researcher, said. “The international community needs to step in and insist the government rescind these charges and release Aung San Suu Kyi.”

Ms Suu’s National League for Democracy won a landslide election victory in 1990 elections, but was never permitted to take power.

Now, the military junta that has ruled the country for decades is preparing to hold fresh elections in 2010, as part of a new constitution that it says will create a ‘disciplined democracy’, including a legislature with 25 per cent of the seats reserved for military members.

Ms Suu Kyi, who has spent nearly 13 of the past 18 years under house arrest, is said to be in poor health and has been treated recently for dehydration and low blood pressure.

The NLD recently issued a statement saying it would consider participating in next year’s election but only on condition that Ms Suu Kyi was freed, that the constitution was amended and the elections were free and fair."

Burma political map