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Monday, February 1, 2010

January 26,2010 - Daily Star Myanmar junta could freed Suu Kyi in November.doc

Copyright (c) 2010 The Daily Star

Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Myanmar junta could freed Suu Kyi in November


By Agence France Presse (AFP)

YANGON, Myanmar: The political party of Myanmar’s detained democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi has heard that the military regime could set her free in November, a spokesman said Monday. The Nobel peace laureate has been kept in detention for 14 of the past 20 years, and in August she was ordered to spend another 18 months in detention after being convicted over an incident in which a US man swam to her house.
According to media reports and local residents, Home Affairs Minister Maung Oo told a meeting of local officials in central Myanmar four days ago that her release would come in November.
“We also heard about it. But it’s difficult to confirm,” Nyan Win, her lawyer and a spokesman for her National League for Democracy (NLD) party told AFP. But he added that the news was “not a strange thing at all.”
“If we calculate the period, Daw Suu’s house arrest will be completed in November,” the lawyer said.
A local resident in the town of Kyaukpadaung, where the meeting was held, said he had heard the same date from witnesses of the speech.
“We were told by some local officials who attended the meeting last Thursday that … Suu Kyi would be released in November,” he said, asking not to be identified.
Suu Kyi’s house arrest remains a sensitive issue in Myanmar and officials contacted by AFP refused to comment on the minister’s remarks.
The extension of Suu Kyi’s detention sparked international outrage as it is expected to keep her off the stage for elections promised by the regime some time this year, although a date for the polls has not yet been announced.
An initial appeal by her lawyers to overturn the sentence was rejected and a decision from Myanmar’s top court on another appeal is expected in the next three weeks.
Her NLD won a landslide victory in the last democratic elections in 1990, but the junta, which has ruled Myanmar since 1962, never allowed the party to take office.
In recent months the United States, followed by the European Union, has shifted towards a policy of greater engagement with Myanmar, as sanctions have failed to bear fruit.
Kurt Campbell, US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific affairs, noted last week there had been a “mixed bag” from Myanmar on calls for political reform. – AFP


Copyright (c) 2010 The Daily Star

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