Imperial Valley Press

Myanmar’s Suu Kyi detained again — without her old support

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BANGKOK (AP) — A day after Myanmar’s military pulled o a well-choreograp­hed coup, the country’s civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, finds herself right back where she was just over a decade ago — under house arrest.

But this time, her stando with the military comes after she has sorely disappoint­ed many oncestaunc­h supporters in the internatio­nal community by cozying up to the country’s generals while in power. Leaders in the West are still denouncing her detention, of course — but they no longer view her as a paragon of democratic leadership. Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party won last November elections by a landslide, catching the generals by surprise. They immediatel­y cried voter fraud — an allegation the country’s election commission has dismissed — and proved Monday who really controls the country, rounding up Suu Kyi and other top leaders under the cover of darkness, just hours before a new session of Parliament was set to convene.

With flights grounded and communicat­ions largely cut, Myanmar plunged back into isolation and darkness, ending 10 years of new freedoms and quasi-civilian rule that the Obama administra­tion held up as a beacon of nascent democracy. The military-owned Myawaddy TV said the country would be under a one-year state of emergency.

Now, it’s not clear who can lead the country out of the wilderness, with Suu Kyi’s reputation abroad badly tarnished.

“I believe that Aung San Suu Kyi has been an accomplice with the military,” said veteran U.S. diplomat, Bill Richardson. “I hope she realizes that her compact with the devil has boomerange­d against her, and that she will now take the right stand on behalf of democracy” and become a true advocate for human rights.

“But if she doesn’t step aside,” he said, “I think the NLD needs to find new leaders.” Suu Kyi, the daughter of independen­ce hero and father of the nation, spent almost 15 years under house arrest before her release in 2010. Her tough stand against the junta turned her into a symbol of peaceful resistance against oppressors — and won her the Nobel Peace Prize.

During her years of confinemen­t, a parade of foreign diplomats, human rights advocates and Nobel laureates streamed into her lakeside villa, demanding the hardline military free the elegant woman known as “The Lady,” who often wears flowers in her hair.

But since her release and return to politics, Suu Kyi has been heavily criticized for the political gamble she made: showing deference to the military while ignoring and, at times, even defending atrocities — most notably a 2017 crackdown on Rohingya Muslims that the United

States and others have labeled genocide.

When she disputed allegation­s at the U.N. Internatio­nal Court of Justice in at The Hague just over a year ago that army personnel killed Rohingya civilians, torched houses and raped women, Jody Williams saw it as a betrayal.

“Beyond rhetoric during election campaigns, what does she really believe in? What does de

mocracy mean to her?” asked Williams, a fellow Nobel Peace Prize winner for her work to ban landmines.

Suu Kyi called such criticism unfair, insisting that she had never considered herself a human rights icon, and that that title had been thrust upon her. She had always been, she argued, a politician.

While she has remained immensely popular at home, that

compromise has lost her supporters abroad — and raises the question of if and how she might lead the country out of the latest crisis.

So far, she has called for civil disobedien­ce to resist the coup — but it’s not clear how the Myanmar people will react and the streets of Yangon have been quiet. In 1988 and 2007, people took to the streets in force to protest dictatorsh­ip.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PETER DEJONG ?? In this 2019 file photo, Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi waits to address judges of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice on the second day of three days of hearings in The Hague, Netherland­s.
AP PHOTO/PETER DEJONG In this 2019 file photo, Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi waits to address judges of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice on the second day of three days of hearings in The Hague, Netherland­s.

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