The Bakersfield Californian

Myanmar court sentences Kyi to 5 years for corruption

- BY GRANT PECK

BANGKOK — A court in military-ruled Myanmar convicted former leader Aung San Suu Kyi of corruption and sentenced her to five years in prison Wednesday in the first of several corruption cases against her.

Suu Kyi, 76, who was ousted by an army takeover last year, has denied the allegation that she accepted gold and hundreds of thousands of dollars in a bribe from a top political colleague.

Her supporters and independen­t legal experts consider Suu Kyi’s prosecutio­n an unjust attempt to discredit her and legitimize the military’s seizure of power while preventing her from returning to an active role in politics.

The daughter of Aung San, Myanmar’s founding father, Suu Kyi became a public figure in 1988 during a failed uprising against a previous military government when she helped found the National League for Democracy party. She spent 15 of the next 21 years under house arrest for leading a nonviolent struggle for democracy that earned her the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize. When the army allowed an election in 2015, her party won a landslide victory and she became the de facto head of state. Her party won a greater majority in the 2020 polls.

Suu Kyi is widely revered at home for her role in the country’s pro-democracy movement — and was long viewed abroad as an icon of that struggle, epitomized by her years under house arrest.

But she also has been heavily criticized for showing deference to the military while ignoring and, at times, even defending rights violations — most notably a 2017 crackdown on Rohingya Muslims that rights groups have labeled genocide. While she has disputed allegation­s that army personnel killed Rohingya civilians, torched houses and raped women and she remains immensely popular at home, that stance has tarnished her reputation abroad.

She has already been sentenced to six years’ imprisonme­nt in other cases and faces 10 more corruption charges. The maximum punishment under the Anti-Corruption Act is 15 years in prison and a fine for each charge. Conviction­s in the other cases could bring sentences of more than 100 years in prison in total.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres reiterated his appeal Tuesday for Myanmar’s military to release all political prisoners including Suu Kyi and his condemnati­on of the military takeover of the country on Feb. 1, 2021, U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said.

The U.N. chief also repeated his call for an immediate end to violence and repression in Myanmar and for respect for the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, “which enshrines the principles of equality before the law, the presumptio­n of innocence, the right to a fair and public hearing by an independen­t and impartial tribunal, and all the guarantees necessary for a person’s defense,” Haq said.

“These are trumped-up charges, politicall­y motivated, to keep her inside prison for such a long time and also are designed to keep her away from the political limelight,” said Wai Hnin Pwint Thon, a Geneva-based activist with the pro-democracy group Burma Campaign UK. “And I’m sure the military is also thinking, by sentencing her, they are grabbing the hope away from people but, in reality, it’s doing completely the opposite because people haven’t lost hope. They are still standing up against the military.”

Suu Kyi’s trial in the capital, Naypyitaw, was closed to the media, diplomats and spectators, and her lawyers were barred from speaking to the media. The evening newscast on state television confirmed the sentence.

Following the victory of Suu Kyi’s party in the 2020 general election, lawmakers were not allowed to take their seats when the army seized power on Feb. 1, 2021, arresting Suu Kyi and many senior colleagues in her party and government. The army said it acted because there had been massive electoral fraud, but independen­t election observers didn’t find any major irregulari­ties.

The takeover was met with large nonviolent protests nationwide which security forces quashed with lethal force, killing almost 1,800 civilians, according to a watchdog group, the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners.

As repression escalated, armed resistance against the military government grew, and some U.N. experts now characteri­ze the country as being in a state of civil war.

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