The Borneo Post

Suu Kyi to appear in court May 24

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YANGON: A judge yesterday ordered Myanmar’s deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi to appear in person in court for the first time on May 24, her lawyer said, after weeks of delays in her case.

The Nobel laureate has not been publicly seen since she was detained in a Feb 1 coup, when the military ousted her from power and re-installed its rule.

She was subsequent­ly hit with a series of charges, and her legal team has faced an uphill battle to get a private audience with their client.

Multiple court hearings in the capital Naypyidaw have seen Suu Kyi – who attended via video conferenci­ng from under house arrest – express frustratio­n at the pace of the proceeding­s.

During the latest hearing yesterday, a judge ordered for her cases to be heard with her present in a special courtroom near her residence.

“She will appear in person in court on May 24,” lawyer Khin Maung Zaw told AFP.

However, he cautioned that the outstandin­g issue of not being able to meet privately with her still remains.

“The problem is not solved yet because the police did not answer on whether they can arrange our meeting,” he said, adding that private counsel is ‘the right of the defendant’.

The 75-year-old former leader has been charged six times since her arrest. The charges include flouting coronaviru­s restrictio­ns during last year’s election campaign and possessing unlicensed walkie-talkies.

The most serious charge alleges that she violated the country’s colonial-era Official Secrets Act – a case that is pending in a court in commercial hub Yangon.

The junta has also accused her of corruption – though no charges have been filed – alleging that she received bribes of gold bars and cash.

The junta has continuous­ly justified her arrest and the coup as a way to defend democracy, alleging electoral fraud by her National League for Democracy Party, which swept November’s elections in a landslide.

Coupmaker Min Aung Hlaing, the army’s commander-in-chief, is now leading the junta, and holds legislativ­e, executive and judicial powers in Myanmar.

Mass protests have continued since the coup, with hundreds of thousands defying junta rule to demand a return to democracy and the release of Suu Kyi.

They have been met with live ammunition from security forces – at least 780 civilians have been killed in brutal crackdowns, said a local monitoring group.

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 ?? File photo — AFP ?? Protester holds up a poster featuring Suu Kyi during a demonstrat­ion against the military coup at in front of the Central Bank of Myanmar in Yangon.
File photo — AFP Protester holds up a poster featuring Suu Kyi during a demonstrat­ion against the military coup at in front of the Central Bank of Myanmar in Yangon.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Protesters make the three-finger salute during a demonstrat­ion against the military coup in Dawei.
— AFP photo Protesters make the three-finger salute during a demonstrat­ion against the military coup in Dawei.

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