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Suu Kyi’s Release?


By SAW YAN NAING Tuesday, November 10, 2009

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Speaking to The Irrawaddy on Tuesday after the announcement that Suu Kyi would be released soon, Nyan Win, the spokesman for the Rangoon-based National League for Democracy (NLD) said, “This is what many people wanted to hear.”

“It is going strengthen the NLD party if she is released. She will organize the election campaign effectively for the party and can perform well on the political stage,” he said.

Speaking to The Associated Press in Manila on Monday, Min Lwin, a senior Burmese diplomat, said, “There is a plan to release her [Suu Kyi] soon ... so she can organize her party.”

NLD leader Win Tin, who is a close friend of Suu Kyi, said there will be a change if she is released.  

Suu Kyi has been detained for 14 of the past 20 years. Her latest detention began in May 2003 after convoy of vehicles in which she was traveling was attacked by junta thugs during a canvassing trip at Depayin. Suu Kyi has been unable to speak publicly since.

Charged with violating the terms of her house arrest in May a few weeks before the end of her detention, Suu Kyi was placed under house arrest for a further 18 months in August.

Suu Kyi said she was satisfied with the recent meeting with the US delegation led by Kurt Campbell and she thanked the Burmese regime for allowing it to happen.

Observers say the release of Suu Kyi should not come as a surprise because junta chief Snr-Gen Than Shwe said in August Suu Kyi would be granted amnesty before her suspended sentence expired if she behaved "well" at her Inya Lake home under the restrictions imposed on her.

Burmese officials regularly make conciliatory promises before regional meetings but fail to follow them up with action, noted one observer, who pointed out that Thein Sein said the election law would be announced soon during the Asean summit in Cha-am in Thailand in October.

On Sunday, Thein Sein and Min Lwin will attend the US-Asean leaders meeting in Singapore, the first between President Obama and Asean leaders.

Rumors circulating among diplomats in Rangoon suggest Min Lwin will be promoted as Burmese ambassador to the US. 

Observers also said a meeting between Suu Kyi and Than Shwe is necessary before the election law is announced because this would help the NLD decide whether to insist on constitutional review before taking part in the election.

Christina Fink, author of a new edition of her book: Living Silence: Burma under Military Rule, also doubts Min Lwin, saying he may have made the comment to ease pressure on the Burmese regime prior to the Singapore summit. 

According to Jeffrey Bader, the US senior director for Asian affairs, Obama will make a personal plea for Suu Kyi’s release at the summit.

If they plan to release Suu Kyi, the junta needs to do it very soon to give her and the NLD enough time to decide on whether to participate in the election and prepare an election campaign, Fink said.  

She said Suu Kyi should be released before the election and political parties contesting the election are announced.

Burma watcher Jeff Kingston, the director of Asian Studies at Temple University’s Japan campus, said the junta’s Constitution excludes Suu Kyi from holding office, so the big questions are whether and how the regime will facilitate her participation in the election.

He said that the other 2,000 political prisoners must also be released.

“The regime should not be negotiating the timing of her release...having raised the possibility of her release they should do so immediately without conditions,” Kingston said. 



COMMENTS (9)
 
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George Than Setkyar Heine Wrote:
11/11/2009
Release of Daw Suu is no news. But her freedom to choose whether to participate or not in the political process of Burma certainly is.

Then it all zeroes in on a review of constitution inevitably.

Freeing Daw Suu only to push the NLD to join the party in crowning Than Shwe is neither fair nor conducive to democracy in Burma.

And Than Shwe will not face Daw Suu and ethnic leaders across a table knowing they will not play ball with him at the expense of suffering millions whom they represent.

Hence, the US pushing for a dialogue prior to free and fair elections in 2010 is no more credible than making Obama shake hands with Osama bin Laden at the White House.

Than Shwe is staying in the game only to buy time and space until 2010 to renew his continued military rule of Burma.

The US or world recognition does not matter as he has China, India, North Korea and Asean to play ball with him. He would not give a damn even if the UN expelled him, for that matter.

Myint Thein, Dallas Wrote:
11/11/2009
Burma's political problems can be solved if Than Shwe had a three-hour meeting with President Obama. But Than Shwe is boycotting the ASEAN Summit with President Obama in Singapore and instead is making a "Yedaya" State Visit to Sri Lanka.

Than Shwe also boycotted the visit of the US envoys and left the jungle capital to visit the Irrawaddy Delta.

Than Shwe is the main obstacle to a political settlement in Burma. They will never release ASSK, Min Ko Naing and the other student leaders.

Min Lwin is simply telling lies to try to get sanctions removed.

Oo Maung Gyi Wrote:
11/11/2009
Snr-Gen Than Shwe is very clever; he knows what to do. He is the person that sent a congratulations letter to Obama during the time of the American election when Obama took a landslide victory.

Now he will do whatever US asks for his name to be famous and to get credibility by issuing a general amnesty before or after fixing the date of the 2010 election.

pLan B Wrote:
11/11/2009
From the news that I have read about the release of DASSK, it seems more like the SPDC is testing the US sincerity as opposed to the other way around.

From #1 going to the Nargis area to remind the gross mistrust US has effected while blaming the SPDC to leaving for Sri Lanka which has recently aspiring to become a military rule government.

It is obvious that Xenophobic #1 not attending the meeting who rarely travels except to China, yet traveling to Sri Lanka is at best posturing and at worst baiting to see the US response with the DASSK card.

Time for the US to jump. The question is can the US prove SPDC belief for so long that "White men can't Jump"?

Yagontha Wrote:
11/11/2009
“There is a plan to release Daw ASSK soon ... so she can organize her party,” said Min Lwin, who received an order from God Than Shwe to play a political game again with not only Burmese people but also to the world.

Another plan for the innocent Burmese in Burma.

Shrek Wrote:
11/11/2009
This is great news. I hope for the sake of democracy in Burma that they release Daw Suu Kyi.

Zam Mang Wrote:
11/11/2009
If she is released, she must have full freedom. That freedom must be followed by her choice to participate in the 2010 election. She has been our hope to regain our lost freedom in the hands of military totalitarians.

Youth Wrote:
11/11/2009
Yes. The release of Daw Suu should not come as a surprise because junta chief Snr-Gen Than Shwe had apologized to DASSK in August for his committing crimes to 55 million Burmese people.

Also, we should not have any doubts that the sanctions are working effectively.

We are reminded by a statement of President Bush saying: “Burmese people will be liberated soon” and strongly demanded the junta to release DASSK unconditionally.

We support what Kingston said: “The regime should not be negotiating the timing of her release...having raised the possibility of her release they should do so immediately without conditions,”

Burmese people are redefining their own history. The last day of junta is approaching.

timothy Wrote:
11/11/2009
This is simply a wishful thinking for democratic minded people.

The sick behaviour of Than Shwe will always prevent Burma getting democracy on international terms. He had already told the international players that he would only consider 7 stages of Road Map or disciplined, sick-termed, democracy. This is his terms. He will soon shut the door for US by simply saying that US is interfering in their affairs.






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