Lawyers for Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi said yesterday they were preparing to open the defense case this week after she pleaded innocent at her trial by the ruling junta.
The prison tribunal enters its second week today, hearing charges that the Nobel Peace Prize winner breached the terms of her house arrest after an American man swam to her lakeside home and spent two days there.
Nyan Win, a spokesman for her National League for Democracy (NLD) party and also part of her legal team, said the prosecution was expected to call final witnesses early this week.
“We expect to begin our defense case this coming week,” Nyan Win said. “Now we are preparing a witness list and are preparing what we need.”
He said he expected it would take another two weeks for a verdict to be reached at the trial, which is being held at the notorious Insein prison near Yangon where Aung San Suu Kyi is being held.
“We will win according to the law. Whether she is released or not is another matter,” Nyan Win said.
The latest, six-year period of Aung San Suu Kyi’s house arrest is to expire on Wednesday and the military regime has not yet said whether it will extend it.
The ailing 63-year-old was taken from her home to prison earlier this month.
She has already spent most of the last 19 years in detention and critics say the charges against her, under which she faces a jail term of up to five years, are an excuse for the junta to keep her locked up ahead of elections next year.
“I don’t see that the authorities will extend her detention [at her house] again. They cannot extend it by law,” he said, adding that under Myanmar’s security laws people can only be held for five years under house arrest.
On Friday Nyan Win quoted her as saying: “I have no guilt as I didn’t commit any crime.”
The prosecution case centers on her allegedly allowing US national John Yettaw to stay at her home for two days after a bizarre incident earlier this month in which he swam to her home.
Yettaw has said in the trial that he wanted to warn Aung San Suu Kyi that she would be assassinated. He brought a number of unusual objects to her house including two black shawls for Muslim women.
The EU is talking of introducing tougher sanctions in response to the trial and the administration of US President Barack Obama has announced it will continue its economic penalties. Obama extended a state of emergency against the country after the Nobel laureates arrest.
‘THEY KILLED HOPE’: Four presidential candidates were killed in the 1980s and 1990s, and Miguel Uribe’s mother died during a police raid to free her from Pablo Escobar Colombian presidential candidate Miguel Uribe has died two months after being shot at a campaign rally, his family said on Monday, as the attack rekindled fears of a return to the nation’s violent past. The 39-year-old conservative senator, a grandson of former Colombian president Julio Cesar Turbay (1978-1982), was shot in the head and leg on June 7 at a rally in the capital, Bogota, by a suspected 15-year-old hitman. Despite signs of progress in the past few weeks, his doctors on Saturday announced he had a new brain hemorrhage. “To break up a family is the most horrific act of violence that
HISTORIC: After the arrest of Kim Keon-hee on financial and political funding charges, the country has for the first time a former president and former first lady behind bars South Korean prosecutors yesterday raided the headquarters of the former party of jailed former South Korean president Yoon Suk-yeol to gather evidence in an election meddling case against his wife, a day after she was arrested on corruption and other charges. Former first lady Kim Keon-hee was arrested late on Tuesday on a range of charges including stock manipulation and corruption, prosecutors said. Her arrest came hours after the Seoul Central District Court reviewed prosecutors’ request for an arrest warrant against the 52-year-old. The court granted the warrant, citing the risk of tampering with evidence, after prosecutors submitted an 848-page opinion laying out
STAGNATION: Once a bastion of leftist politics, the Aymara stronghold of El Alto is showing signs of shifting right ahead of the presidential election A giant cruise ship dominates the skyline in the city of El Alto in landlocked Bolivia, a symbol of the transformation of an indigenous bastion keenly fought over in tomorrow’s presidential election. The “Titanic,” as the tallest building in the city is known, serves as the latest in a collection of uber-flamboyant neo-Andean “cholets” — a mix of chalet and “chola” or Indigenous woman — built by Bolivia’s Aymara bourgeoisie over the past two decades. Victor Choque Flores, a self-made 46-year-old businessman, forked out millions of US dollars for his “ship in a sea of bricks,” as he calls his futuristic 12-story
FORUM: The Solomon Islands’ move to bar Taiwan, the US and others from the Pacific Islands Forum has sparked criticism that Beijing’s influence was behind the decision Tuvaluan Prime Minister Feletei Teo said his country might pull out of the region’s top political meeting next month, after host nation Solomon Islands moved to block all external partners — including China, the US and Taiwan — from attending. The Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) leaders’ meeting is to be held in Honiara in September. On Thursday last week, Solomon Islands Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele told parliament that no dialogue partners would be invited to the annual gathering. Countries outside the Pacific, known as “dialogue partners,” have attended the forum since 1989, to work with Pacific leaders and contribute to discussions around