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Myanmar junta chief halves Suu Kyi jail term to 2 years

6 Dec 2021 Myanmar junta chief halves Suu Kyi jail term to 2 years By AFP

Yangon – Myanmar’s junta chief reduced the prison sentence of ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi to two years on Monday, after she was jailed for four years for incitement against the military and breaching COVID-19 rules.

Suu Kyi (76) has been detained since the generals staged a coup and ousted her government on February 1, ending the Southeast Asian country’s brief period of democracy.

She has since been hit with a series of charges, including violating the official secrets act, illegally importing walkie talkies and electoral fraud, and faces decades in prison. 

On Monday Suu Kyi was sentenced to two years for incitement against the military and another two years for breaching a natural disaster law relating to COVID-19, junta spokesman Zaw Min Tun told AFP by phone.

Former president Win Myint was also initially jailed for four years on the same charges, which the US later blasted as an ‘affront’ to justice.

Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing later ‘pardoned’ the sentences of both to ‘two years imprisonment’, according to a statement read out on state TV.

They would serve their sentences under the house arrest they have been kept under in the capital of Naypyidaw, the statement said, without giving further details.

On Monday evening residents in parts of commercial capital Yangon banged pots and pans – a practice traditionally associated with driving out evil spirits but which has been used since February to show dissent against the military. 

Suu Kyi’s incitement conviction related to statements her National League for Democracy party published shortly after the coup condemning the generals’ takeover.

The COVID-19 charge is linked to last year’s election, which the NLD won in a landslide, but the details are not clear with the government imposing a gag order on the court proceedings. 

Journalists have been barred from attending the special court hearings in Naypyidaw and Suu Kyi’s lawyers were recently banned from speaking to the media.

In recent weeks, other senior members of the NLD have received long sentences.

A former chief minister was sentenced to 75 years in jail, while a close Suu Kyi aide was jailed for 20.

Suu Kyi also faces multiple corruption charges – each of which carries a possible sentence of 15 years in prison. 

Monday’s verdict was on ‘the soft charges which the regime could have spared her, but chose not to’, independent analyst Soe Myint Aung, said.

“The military seems to have doubled down on its highly oppressive approach toward the NLD and Aung San Suu Kyi herself.”

The pardon was ‘more stage managed than even the sentencing itself’, International Crisis Group’s Myanmar senior advisor Richard Horsey told AFP.

“If it was an attempt at magnanimity, it has fallen flat.” 

Amnesty International immediately condemned the original sentences against Suu Kyi.

“The harsh sentences handed down to Aung San Suu Kyi on these bogus charges are the latest example of the military’s determination to eliminate all opposition and suffocate freedoms in Myanmar,” said Amnesty deputy regional director for Campaigns Ming Yu Hah.

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