Burma’s pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi went on trial today in a notorious prison ringed by riot police and barbed wire as activists vowed to stage protests across the country until she is freed.
She faces up to five years’ imprisonment on charges that she violated conditions of her years-long detention by sheltering an American man who swam to her lakeside home earlier this month.
More than 100 of her supporters were able to pass through the outer circle of barricades around Insein prison in Rangoon but not the inner one which was closely guarded by armed police and pro-regime supporters. One young protester was seen being taken away by police.
The ambassadors of Britain, France, Germany and Italy as well as an Australian diplomat were barred from entering the prison, but the US consul was allowed into the prison compound since a US citizen, John William Yettaw, also was on trial along with Ms Suu Kyi.
Mr Yettaw’s motives for entering Ms Suu Kyi’s compound earlier this month remain unclear and her supporters have expressed anger at him for getting the Nobel Peace laureate into trouble. Ms Suu Kyi’s lawyers have said he was not invited to her residence, and that she told him to leave.
US Embassy spokesman Drake Wiesert said it was unclear if the consul would be allowed to attend the court proceedings, or whether Mr Yettaw was represented by a lawyer.
On the eve of Ms Suu Kyi’s trial, her defence lawyer said she was innocent of the charges.
“We call all political forces for Free Aung San Suu Kyi to mobilise all over Burma, by holding praying sessions in homes, places of worship... and holding silent, peaceful rallies in front of Insein prison,” said a statement from three activist groups.
The groups included an organisation of Buddhist monks, who were at the forefront of the 2007 protests, which were brutally crushed by the regime.
Security forces blocked all roads leading to the prison. Several hundred riot police, many armed with guns, batons and shields, guarded the perimeter of Insein, where the regime has for years incarcerated political prisoners.
The group of supporters from Ms Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy which was able to press close to the prison was led by Win Tin, a leading party member. He was freed last September after 19 years of imprisonment for exposing human rights violations in Burma’s prisons.
“After listening to the sequence of events, it is very clear that there is no breach of conditions of her restrictions,” lawyer Kyi Win said after visiting the Noble Peace Prize laureate in the prison over the weekend.
Ms Suu Kyi (63) was charged last Thursday with violating the terms of her detention by sheltering Mr Yettaw, reportedly a Vietnam War-era veteran, who will also be tried along with two female assistants who have been with Ms Suu Kyi since 2003. The four are due to be tried together.
Ms Suu Kyi had been scheduled to be freed on May 27 after six consecutive years of house arrest, but the ruling junta was widely expected to once again extend her detention period. International lawyers say this would have been illegal under Burma’s own laws.
The latest charges are widely seen as a pretext for the government to keep Ms Suu Kyi detained past elections scheduled for next year as the culmination of a “roadmap to democracy” which has been criticised as a fig leaf for continued military control.
Burma has been ruled by its military since 1962. The regime lost democratic elections in 1990 but did not honour the landslide victory of Ms Suu Kyi’s party.
In today’s court session, Kyi Win said Ms Suu Kyi’s defence team will ask for an open trial and may also request bail. The prosecution is expected to call 22 witnesses during the trial.
Kyi Win said Ms Suu Kyi was ready to tell her side of the story. “She has always been ready to tell the truth,” he said. Her latest arrest has sparked a storm of international appeals to Burma’s government to free her and to restore democracy in the country. She has been detained for more than 13 of the last 19 years.
In unusually sharp criticism from a South-east Asian nation, Philippines Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo said yesterday that his government was “deeply troubled and outraged” over the “trumped-up charges” against Ms Suu Kyi.
“We urge the government of Myanmar (Burma) to resolve the matter speedily and to release Aung San Suu Kyi immediately and unconditionally,” he said.
Normally, members of the 10-country Association of South-east Asian Nations, which includes Burma, refrain from criticising one another.
Exactly why Mr Yettaw, of Falcon, Missouri, swam across the lake to see Ms Suu Kyi remains unclear. After leaving, he was fished out of the water by authorities about 1.2 miles from her residence and taken into custody.
“I cannot tell you what he was thinking when he made those swims or whether or not he considered the consequences for anyone but himself,” said his stepson Paul in an email to The Associated Press today.
“He knew he could be caught and arrested, though I am very sure it never occurred to him that Suu Kyi or her companions could also suffer from his choices,” he said.
His wife, Betty Yettaw, earlier described her husband as eccentric but peace-loving and “not political at all”.
According to his ex-wife, Yvonne Yettaw, he said he went to Asia to work on a psychology paper about forgiveness.
She said he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and a head wound during his military service. His former wife said he belongs to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, commonly known as the Mormons, adding that it was unlikely he was in South-east Asia to proselytise for the church or convert the Nobel laureate.
“As a family, we are very sorry for any additional problems that John’s action may have caused Suu Kyi and her companions,” his stepson said.
AP