The Star Malaysia

Junta shows mercy on New Year

Ousted leader Suu Kyi moved from prison to house arrest due to heat

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JAILED former leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been moved from prison to house arrest as a health measure due to a heatwave, the military government said.

It also granted amnesty for over 3,000 prisoners to mark this week’s traditiona­l New Year holiday yesterday.

Suu Kyi, 78, and Win Myint, the 72-year-old former president of her ousted government, were among elderly and infirm prisoners moved out of prison because of the severe heat, the military’s spokespers­on, Maj-gen Zaw Min Tun, told foreign media representa­tives late Tuesday.

The move has not yet been publicly announced in Myanmar.

Suu Kyi’s transfer comes as the army has been suffering a string of major defeats in its fight against pro-democracy resistance fighters and their allies in ethnic minority guerilla forces.

The nationwide conflict began after the army ousted the elected government in February 2021, imprisoned Suu Kyi and began suppressin­g nonviolent protests that sought a return to democratic rule.

Suu Kyi has been serving a 27-year prison term on a variety of criminal conviction­s in a specially-built wing of the main prison in the capital Naypyidaw, where Myanmar’s meteorolog­ical department said temperatur­es reached 39°C on Tuesday afternoon.

Win Myint was serving an eight-year prison sentence in Taungoo in Myanmar’s Bago region.

Suu Kyi’s supporters and independen­t analysts say the charges were fabricated in an attempt to discredit her and legitimise the military’s seizure of power.

The military had claimed that her National League for Democracy Party used widespread electoral fraud to win a landslide victory in the 2020 general election, an allegation independen­t observers found unconvinci­ng.

According to the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners, an independen­t group that monitors casualties and arrests, more than 20,351 people arrested on political charges since the 2021 army takeover are still in detention, most of whom have not received criminal conviction­s.

Suu Kyi’s health has reportedly deteriorat­ed in prison. In September last year, reports emerged that she was suffering from symptoms of low blood pressure including dizziness and loss of appetite, but had been denied treatment at qualified facilities outside the prison system.

Those reports could not be independen­tly confirmed, but her younger son Kim Aris said in interviews that he had heard that his mother has been extremely ill and has been suffering from gum problems and was unable to eat.

Aris, who lives in England, urged that Myanmar’s military government be pressured to free his mother and other political prisoners. News about Suu Kyi is tightly controlled by the military government, and even her lawyers are banned by a gag order from talking to the media about her cases.

Her legal team has faced several hurdles, including being unable to meet with her to receive her instructio­ns since they last saw her in person in December 2022. Whether the latest move was meant to be temporary was not announced.

Spokespers­on Zaw Min Tun did not say where the released prisoners were being moved to in his remarks to Us-government funded Voice of America and Britain’s BBC, but there was no indication it might be one of her own former homes.

The lakeside house where Suu Kyi spent most of her years in house arrest is in legal limbo after a court-ordered auction in March failed to find a buyer. Before being sent to prison, Suu Kyi was reportedly held in a military safe house inside an army base.

Suu Kyi, the daughter of Myanmar’s martyred independen­ce hero Gen Aung San, spent almost 15 years as a political prisoner under house arrest by previous military government­s between 1989 and 2010.

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 ?? — AFP ?? Longing hearts: Relatives gathering around a bus carrying prisoners released from Insein prison. (Inset) Suu Kyi has been moved from prison to house arrest in the pardon exercise.
— AFP Longing hearts: Relatives gathering around a bus carrying prisoners released from Insein prison. (Inset) Suu Kyi has been moved from prison to house arrest in the pardon exercise.

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