Aung San Suu Kyi Found Guilty

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DENIS D. GRAY | 08/11/09 11:46 PM | AP

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Aung San Suu Kyi

BANGKOK — Myanmar's generals have again succeeded in isolating democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, but her fleeting emergence during a grueling trial showed that her steely resolve and charisma remain intact.

A Myanmar court on Tuesday convicted the 64-year-old Nobel Peace laureate of violating her house arrest by allowing an uninvited American to stay at her home. Her sentence of three years in prison with hard labor was quickly commuted to 18 months house arrest after an order from the head of the military-ruled country, Senior Gen. Than Shwe.

Suu Kyi has been in detention for 14 of the last 20 years, and the extension will remove her from the political scene next year when the junta holds its first election since 1990. Her party won in the polls then but was never allowed to take power.

Her conviction and continued detention were condemned by world leaders and sparked demonstrations in cities from London to Japan. The European Union began preparing new sanctions against the country's military regime and a group of 14 Nobel Laureates, including the Dalai Lama and Archbishop Desmond Tutu, called on the U.N. Security Council to take strong action against the country.

President Barack Obama termed Suu Kyi's conviction a violation of "the universal principle of human rights" and said she should be released immediately.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called for the release of more than 2,000 political prisoners, including John Yettaw, the American Suu Kyi was charged with harboring. He was convicted along with her and sentenced to seven years' imprisonment with hard labor.

One of Suu Kyi's lawyers, Nyan Win, said that she had instructed her defense team to proceed with an appeal and that they had applied for permission to meet with her Wednesday.

Supporters had suggested that the government would look for ways to keep Suu Kyi isolated until after the elections.

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"The outcome of this trial has never been in doubt," said Jared Genser, president of Freedom Now and Suu Kyi's international counsel, noting that her continued detention was in "clear violation" of their own laws.

But even locked away in her crumbling lakeside mansion, Suu Kyi – daughter of the country's slain independence leader, Gen. Aung San – remains a potentially powerful force in the country that has remained under harsh military rule for nearly half a century.

Josef Silverstein, professor emeritus at Rutgers University and a Myanmar expert, said that while Suu Kyi may never lead the country, her influence will continue.

"She wants a peaceful and united Burma with the people drawing strength from her example," said Silverstein, referring to the Southeast Asian nation by its old name, which is preferred by many of the ruling military's critics.

Suu Kyi was shown leniency because the junta wished to avoid international criticism and ease internal pressure, said Win Tin, a senior member of her National League for Democracy party.

"This is a clever decision by the government," said Win Tin, an ex-prisoner released last year after serving almost 19 years. Suu Kyi could have received a maximum sentence of five years' imprisonment at hard labor.

Suu Kyi looked alert but tired during the 90-minute court session. She stood as the verdict was announced and then thanked foreign diplomats for attending her trial.

"I look forward to working with you in the future for the peace and prosperity of my country and the region," Suu Kyi said in a soft voice to diplomats seated nearby. She then was led out of the courtroom.

Officials said Suu Kyi, who had stayed in a prison guest house during her trial, was driven back to her lakeside villa in a six-car convoy. One of her party members tied yellow ribbons to the gate and two nearby trees as a gesture of welcome.

Suu Kyi will likely return to her pretrial routine: daily meditation, listening to radio news broadcasts and waiting for the occasional, censored mail.

During her trial, which ran for more than 12 weeks, diplomats and supporters said they were impressed by Suu Kyi's grace under pressure, rebuking those who criticized Yettaw's act as foolish, sharing her birthday chocolate cake with prison guards and thanking envoys for their support.

"She commanded her team and in many ways the room," said British Ambassador Mark Canning of her courtroom appearance.

Some commentaries describe Suu Kyi as an accidental leader, having returned to her homeland after two decades abroad to nurse her dying mother just as an anti-regime uprising erupted. She was thrust to the forefront of pro-democracy demonstrations in 1988, which were brutally crushed.

But Silverstein and others note her rise to Myanmar's democracy icon wasn't simply by chance. As a teenager overseas, Suu Kyi developed an intense interest in her father, who was gunned down by political rivals when she was just a toddler.

She wrote a short biography and seemingly adopted her father Aung San's sense of nationalist mission, military-like discipline and a stubborn streak. Her mother, Khin Kyi, espoused a strong moral code and the nonviolent struggle of India's independence leader Mohandas K. Gandhi, to whom Suu Kyi has since been compared.

Defying the 1988 crackdown which may have killed thousands – no official tally was ever released – she helped found the National League for Democracy party to restore elected government. With her popularity posing a threat to their power, she was placed under house arrest in 1989, and thousands of her party's members jailed.

Despite the repression, her party won a landslide victory in a 1990 general election, but the army refused to recognize the results and retained power.

She was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 1991 for her nonviolent struggle for democracy, but only in 1995 was she freed amid hope for political reconciliation. She was periodically detained after that whenever her party seemed to be posing a challenge.

The junta gave Suu Kyi permission to leave the country to see her family when her husband died in 1999. But she refused, fearing she would never be allowed to return.

She has been detained continuously since May 2003, after her motorcade was attacked by government-backed mob.

BANGKOK — Myanmar's generals have again succeeded in isolating democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, but her fleeting emergence during a grueling trial showed that her steely resolve and charisma r...
BANGKOK — Myanmar's generals have again succeeded in isolating democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, but her fleeting emergence during a grueling trial showed that her steely resolve and charisma r...
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- yankees I'm a Fan of yankees 22 fans permalink

Once again the UN is a useless piece of waste which can't solve anything, even when most of the World is in agreement on the treatment of this outstanding woman.
Economic sanctions work the best but who can you go after? China owns us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 AM on 08/12/2009
- pinkyboo I'm a Fan of pinkyboo 22 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:52 AM on 08/12/2009

You cant respect the sovereignty of a military dictatorship. They never respected the election. What a mess they made.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 AM on 08/12/2009
- Chopin I'm a Fan of Chopin 76 fans permalink

There are two international statesmen of the highest caliber and honor. One is Nelson Mandela of South Africa. The other is Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar. Both possess extreme courage and clarity of purpose.

United States government talks a lot about defending and promoting democracy around the world. Here is a case in Myanmar that could not demonstrate any clearer difference between a brutal illegitimate military dictatorship and a people's favorite democratically chosen leader. America should stand on principle with Aung San Suu Kyi and against the Burmese generals. The State Department should launch the strongest diplomatic protest, and sponsor a binding UN Security Council resolution to free her from captivity and restrictions. The US should match words with deeds, not just when it involves oil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 AM on 08/12/2009
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This is the same junta that shot foreign journalists, who were filming anti-regime protests, dead in the streets.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 AM on 08/12/2009
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This is the same junta that two years ago went to the monastery of protesting Buddhist monks and slaughtered them, loaded their bodies into trucks and "disappeared" them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 AM on 08/12/2009
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The same junta who shot foreign reporters dead in the streets, reporters who were filming the junta's police riots.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 08/12/2009
- prosha I'm a Fan of prosha 9 fans permalink

i'll try over here as on the thrilling main page gecko vs man story i can't get a comment in that is not just bashing the right wing...this site is dangerous to free speech

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 PM on 08/11/2009
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So good to see protests and resistance to this outrage. Those pathetic leaders need to go. Rev. Bookburn - Radio Volta

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 PM on 08/11/2009

Yes. Absolutely. It is deplorable that Aung San Suu Kyi has been sentenced to a continuation of her house arrest. But, do not tell me that the crap that goes on inside the USA is not at least deplorable's younger cousin.

Here are two articles from today's (Aug 11, 2009) news:

CNN News: Childless man released from child support debt ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- A Georgia man who spent a year in jail for nonpayment of child support -- despite the fact he has no children -- has been cleared of the debt, his attorney said Tuesday. Frank Hatley, 50, spent 13 months in jail for being a deadbeat dad before his release last month. A judge ordered him jailed in June 2008 for failing to support his "son" -- a child who DNA tests proved was not fathered by Hatley.

Yahoo News: Ill. man faces 6 months in jail for yawning JOLIET, Ill. – Drowsy spectators in one suburban Chicago courtroom might want to stifle their yawns from now on. Clifton Williams, 33, of Richton Park, is facing six months in jail for making what court documents call a yawn-like sound in Will County Judge Daniel Rozak's court last month. The yawn happened as Williams' cousin, Jason Mayfield, was being sentenced for a drug charge on July 23.

So please USA get off your high horse and face your own hypocrisy fair and square.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 PM on 08/11/2009
- sharonh I'm a Fan of sharonh 246 fans permalink
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Keep your steely resolve Suu. I am so sad to hear this news.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 PM on 08/11/2009

Check out the relationship between the junta and Chevron. Have our brave pols put any pressure on Chevron to stop doing business in Myanmar? NO, just as US based multinationals do business in dictatorships all over the world with impunity. The biggest one that comes to mind is Saudi Arabia. Profit first. Human rights, in the rear.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 PM on 08/11/2009
- thehoopoe I'm a Fan of thehoopoe 11 fans permalink

If you guys are serious you could write your representatives and pressure them to pressure the Singapore government to stop supplying the junta with weapons, tanks etc, or training their military to be more effective oppressors, or laundering the junta's money for them, or conducting all their banking for them or giving medical care to all their high level cadres.

Without Singapore's assistance the junta would be greatly weakened.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 PM on 08/11/2009
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I cannot help, but think that the hypocrisy of American ideals by America let the whole world down. No longer can America be a role model, a dream, a call for what is good after the Bush administration. In fact, no administration, save for perhaps Carter's, held up true American ideals of following law, but the Bush Jr. administration showed the extent of the hubris of criminals when others like them are not brought to justice. People seem to have forgotten that the Justice Department's purpose is to discourage criminality by bringing criminals to justice. This means prosecuting people when it is likely they have committed a crime, not on the likelihood that the case will be won. When a case is tried, more evidence does inevitably appear. People on the fence of criminality should be made to feel that they cannot get away with it. Look at the what is going on in Burma, Sudan, Russia, Congo, China, Israel, Nigeria, and the move to big brother all over the world, and tell me that it does not seem that by failing our constitution and by not bringing our criminals to justice, that it does not give an implicit wink to criminals all over the world. When we do bad, the world quickly becomes a much worse place to live.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 PM on 08/11/2009
- JerryLevy I'm a Fan of JerryLevy 59 fans permalink
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Your country is a beacon of human rights and democracy, maybe not perfect but we are a role model and a country where everyone in the world wants to live and for good reason. You venom towards the U.S. and Israel shows an inability to think critically at all. These countries have free and fair elections, minority rights are protected, complete freedom of religion and private property rights. Your country has done more about AIDS in Africa than any other. Your insidious hate filled comment that somehow Israel is in the same category as Sudan and Nigeria would be laughable except it is so perverted. See someone about your bigotry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 AM on 08/12/2009

More empty "outrage" from so-called world leaders. Clinton's megaphone won't help. We need real diplomacy. That means quietly and relentlessly turning the screws on the Chinese, the Thais and the Indians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:59 PM on 08/11/2009
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You are so right!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 08/12/2009
- Chopin I'm a Fan of Chopin 76 fans permalink

You make high stakes international diplomacy sound like midieval Frankenstein torture chambers?

Is this Freudian slip? or do you always caricature other nations in terms of deserving "carrots and sticks" or "thumbscrews"? They're OK for donkeys and Frankenstein monsters, but show kinda misleading out-of-fashion arrogant attitudes, don't you think?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 08/12/2009
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Kind of a shame we just can't go get her.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 08/11/2009
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 71 fans permalink

and all of those women in Congo as well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 PM on 08/11/2009
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