The other thing rediculous about her is she likes to use religous in her political games. She uses Budhhist Monk in 2007. Now she uses Mormon man again. I am so afraid Muslim get involved soon. I believe Christian will not get near her because she left Christian faith for Budhhist in order to get her vote in Myanmar. Myanmar is 95% Budhhist. Budhhist are proud that she became Budhhist. But her Monk is less powerful than Than Shwe. She is a loser of all.
Same Old Song and Dance
Burma's exiled prime minister explains how Aung San Suu Kyi is dealing with her sentence—and argues that, as long as the junta is around, Burma has no hope.
Email To A Friend
Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.
The guilty verdict handed down last week came as no surprise to those following the bizarre case brought against Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi by the country's military government. The junta—in power since 1962—claimed that the Nobel Peace Prize winner broke the rules of her house arrest when she allowed American John Yettaw into her house after he swam across a lake to see her last May. Her original sentence was three years' hard labor, but in a PR play, Gen. Than Shwe, the junta leader, commuted it to 18 months' house arrest.
Suu Kyi, who was elected prime minister in 1990 when her National League for Democracy party won the elections, has been under house arrest for 14 of the past 20 years. Her first cousin Sein Win—who in January was re-elected prime minister of the exiled Burmese government—was in Indonesia last week to launch the Movement for Democracy and Rights for Ethnic Nationalities, a coalition of major Burmese ethnic and pro-democracy parties, both exiled and within Burma. Returning back to his home base in suburban Maryland this week, Win spoke by telephone with NEWSWEEK's Ginanne Brownell about the verdict, the upcoming elections, and how his cousin is handling her latest sentence.
BROWNELL: What was your reaction when you heard the verdict—were you surprised or did you expect it?
WIN: Not really surprised, no. From the very beginning we took this to be as a political plot. And of course we all are looking to whether she could be included in the 2010 elections. By this act, she is definitely excluded.
Why do you think Gen. Than Shwe commuted her sentence?
They have to be careful about internal outrage within Burma. She is the daughter of Aung San, who was the founder of the Burmese Army; this kind of sentence, if people hear about it, it will cause outrage. And their main objective is not the sentence—their main objective is to exclude her from the political process.
John Yettaw's wife suggested that her husband's arrest actually was a positive thing, because it raised awareness of her plight. What do you think of that?
That is going too far. Suu Kyi already has international attention. It's not fair.
Are you mad at him?
If he did this a few years ago, we would have been mad at him. But the timing is so coincidental that even if he didn't do it, the military would have found an excuse to detain her further. But he should really keep away from these politics.
- 1
- 2
- Next Page »









Discuss