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BURMESE VERSION




Who is John W. Yettaw?


By SAW YAN NAING Tuesday, May 19, 2009

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John William Yettaw, 53, spent more than a month at a hotel in Mae Sot in November 2008, after he had traveled to Rangoon and visited Aung San Suu Kyi’s compound for the first time.

While in Mae Sot, people recall him saying that he planned to return to visit Suu Kyi again, which led to his second, fateful encounter with Suu Kyi in May, according to Burmese and Thai sources.

John William Yettaw is shown in this 2005 handout photo released by his family. (Photo: AP)
Suu Kyi, Yettaw and two others are now standing trial in Insein Prison in Rangoon on charges that they violated her terms of house arrest. Suu Kyi has entered a plea of innocent, saying she had no control over Yettaw’s visit to her compound, where she has been under house arrest for 13 of the past 19 years.

Burmese security forces provide a 24-hour guard around her compound on Inya Lake.

Press reports suggested that when Yettaw went to Rangoon in November of last year he was forced to lay over in Burma due to the closure of Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok, which was seized by Thai protesters led by the People’s Alliance for Democracy.      

While in Mae Sot, Yettaw stayed at the Highland Hotel, where he spoke to several people about Burma and made brief comments about Suu Kyi. He openly told people about his first visit to her compound.

He said he was coming back to Mae Sot in April, said a Burmese source.  

Sources said that while in Mae Sot, he was frequently accompanied by a Thai woman, and he visited refugee schools where he met children and took notes. 

One Burmese source said that few people paid much attention to Yettaw, seeing him as a typical tourist.

Thai security officials are now gathering information on Yettaw, said a Burmese activist who requested anonymity.

According to his family members, Yettaw is still in debt for the expenses he incurred from his first trip to Burma in 2008. Before leaving his home in Falcon, Missouri, Yettaw told his wife, Betty Yettaw, that he planned to visit Asia for a book he is writing, according to an Associated Press story.

Betty Yettaw said she was surprise after hearing that her husband had swam nearly two kilometers across Inya Lake in Rangoon, because he suffers from asthma and diabetes.   

Publications and blogs which are closely associated with Burmese authorities of information ministry, such as tharkinwe.com and myanmarnargis.org, posted photos of Yettaw, but there have been no photographs showing the spot where he was arrested by Burmese police.

One conspiracy theory on a Burmese opposition blog, www.niknayman-niknayman.co.cc, contends that Yettaw in fact walked into Suu Kyi’s compound after a taxi driver dropped him in front of Suu Kyi’s home.  

The blog alleges that Yettaw walked into the compound after he showed a red card to the guards in front of the democracy leader’s house.

Yettaw, a Mormon, reportedly does not hold strong political views. He receives disability payments from the US Veteran’s Affairs office for Vietnam-related injuries and has pursued studies in psychology.



COMMENTS (11)
 
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Edwin Karr Wrote:
27/05/2009
I did the math on this guy's age and corresponding year of birth and it seems a little stretched to me that he could have ever seen "post traumatic stress inducing" combat in Viet Nam. At best he was injured in some sort of administrative position sometime after 1974 when he would have been 18 years old. At that time, there was very little if any combat in Viet Nam. So, he's a special guy if he is getting veteran's benefits connected to the Viet Nam war.

Charles Clemens Wrote:
22/05/2009
I hope that Mr. Yettaw's disability benefits are cut. Any person capable of traveling the world and swimming 2,000 meters must be capable of employment.

Phil Wrote:
21/05/2009
Just who is this man? Is he truly only 53 years old? If so, what sort of PTSD did he suffer in Vietnam when he wouldn't have been even 17 years old when combat troops stopped being sent there. At the time, as now, you have to be 18 years old to serve in a combat zone.

KKK Wrote:
21/05/2009
To Oparlay: Good points. I totally agree with you. If Burmese people have courage like Talibans and Palestinians, Burma is already a democratic country.

Son of Liberty Wrote:
20/05/2009
Unfortunately all he did was to stick his finger in the eye of the military junta and gave them a reason to extend Suu Kyi's house arrest, or even place her in prison.

I hope he gets a few years in prison to think about how his actions jeopardize others.

Penglam Wrote:
20/05/2009
Surely without doubt he is a planted agent of the Burma military junta as those so called UN special envoys who had became turned-coats after being bribed by the junta. With out doubt Yettaw is a bribed victim as a result of financial trouble.

Oparlay Wrote:
20/05/2009
Mae Sot is the place for opportunities for people seeking political asylum as well as for the foreigners who have jobs from the supported funds. Some people with money from Yangon are also going there pretending to be refugees (by paying lots of money) to get asylum visas. No doubt people like Yettaw will be busy visiting there to get something to write about and to make money.

The idea I want to tell here is Burma’s outcry for democracy will never work due to the lack of unity, because of the opportunists and remember the military regime is so clever knowing all these things. So let's enjoy the life like this and just find your own niche to survive. Good Luck Burmese. Stop dreaming about any troops coming to wipe out the regime. Forget UN, they have to make money for their retirement. Just get on the street and do something for your living and don't mess up with them because it won't work. We have already passed nearly two decades and the situation is always the same.

dacaro87@yahoo.ca Wrote:
20/05/2009
I find this entire story absolutely ridiculous and a slap in the face to democracy in general.

I'm not sure how big this lake is, but by seeing the photo of John W. Yettaw, I'm having trouble believing that he would be able to swim a great distance.

couch and clark family Wrote:
20/05/2009
Yettaw would never do anything to put anyone in harm’s way. All he ever wanted to do is be peaceful and try to make everyone get along to the best of their ability. He is caring and would give the clothes off his back to anyone who needed them, even if that was the last piece of clothing he had.

Josh Wallace Wrote:
20/05/2009
My family and I also tried to visit Aung San Suu Kvi in January. We didn't actually expect to be allowed in, but we were making the point that she is a special person. I would like to see a long line of visitors to her house--or, if necessary, to her prison. What better way to tell the world that Burma and its truly elected leader have not been forgotten?

In any case, we were chased away by an army officer, which is what I anticipated, but did receive a few dozen solidarity fists in support from workers munching in an outdoor canteen.

More visitors, more solidarity, that's what I want!

Could someone have slipped through the front entrance rather than the rear? Wouldn't surprise me very much, but I'm not sure what difference it makes.

As someone noted the other day, Burma is the only country in the world where you can go to prison for having an overnight guest. The criminal is not Yettaw, not Suu Kyi, it is the system . . . and I hope the Burmese will unite to take it down at once.

Thway Ni Wrote:
19/05/2009
In my opinion, he is nothing but just an irresponsible person who acted purely out of his own interest to write a book. A moron like him seemed to have no idea about how his senseless actions would end up implicating Daw Su and Burma.

He has unwittingly become an "accomplice" to SPDC.





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