Hindustan Times (Noida)

Myanmar’s Suu Kyi set to face court this week

Detained democracy icon will appear via video link as military tries to quell protests

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

YANGON: Myanmar’s deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi will appear in court via video conference this week over charges brought against her by the new military junta, her lawyer said on Monday, even as security forces intensifie­d their crackdown against anti-coup protesters.

Soldiers and police pointed guns toward protesters and attacked them with sticks as smaller demonstrat­ions were held in spite of deployment of armoured vehicles and more troops on the streets.

Army chief Gen Min Aung Hlaing has justified the February 1 coup by alleging widespread voter fraud in November’s elections, which Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party had swept. Suu Kyi was hit with the unusual charge of violating Myanmar’s import and export law, after a search of her house found walkie-talkies.

President Win Myint - who, like Suu Kyi, was detained in a dawn raid on February 1 - was charged with violating coronaviru­s restrictio­ns when he took part in a campaign event last September that drew hundreds.

Both are expected to be questioned on Tuesday and Wednesday, said lawyer Khin Maung Zaw outside a court in Naypyidaw, Myanmar’s capital, after a meeting with a judge. “When they are brought to the court on both February 16 and 17, they will be questioned via video-concial

ferencing,” he said. Neither has been publicly seen since the coup, though Suu Kyi’s party has heard that she is “in good health”. Their detention period was set to end on Wednesday, said the lawyer - though it was likely to be extended.

On Monday, More than 1,000 protesters rallied in front of the Myanmar Economic Bank in Mandalay, the country’s secondlarg­est city. At least 10 trucks full of soldiers and police arrived and started firing slingshots toward the protesters before they even got out of the trucks, according witnesses.

The soldiers and police then attacked the protesters with sticks and slingshots, and police could be seen aiming long guns into the air amid sounds that resembled gunfire.

An hours-long internet shutdown was imposed on Monday. Military’s presence is up across the country including armoured vehicles in Yangon, the commerhub and biggest city.

The coup and arrest of Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi and hundreds of others have sparked the biggest protests in Myanmar in more than a decade, with hundreds of thousands denouncing the military’s derailment of a tentative transition to democracy. “This is a fight for our future, the future of our country,” youth activist Esther Ze Naw said at a protest in the main city of Yangon.

“We don’t want to live under a military dictatorsh­ip. We want to establish a real federal union where all citizens, all ethnicitie­s are treated equally.”

The unrest has revived memories in the Southeast Asian nation of bloody outbreaks of opposition to almost half a century of direct army rule that ended in 2011, when the military began a process of withdrawin­g from civilian politics.

Violence this time has been limited, although police have opened fire several times to disperse protesters. One woman who was hit by police fire in the capital Naypyitaw last week is not expected to survive.

Coup leader Min Aung Hlaing told a junta meeting on Monday that authoritie­s were trying to proceed softly, but said: “Effective action will be taken against people who are harming the country, committing treason through violence.”

Authoritie­s have said police were also hurt by stones thrown at some protests.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A demonstrat­or holds up a placard with the image of Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon, Myanmar, on Monday.
REUTERS A demonstrat­or holds up a placard with the image of Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon, Myanmar, on Monday.
 ??  ?? READ: Junta deploys more soldiers even as protests thin
READ: Junta deploys more soldiers even as protests thin

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