Amnesty International Barred From Seeing Aung San
Suu Kyi
by Richard S. Ehrlich
BANGKOK, Thailand -- Burma's military regime blocked Amnesty International from meeting
Aung San Suu Kyi, the world's most famous
political prisoner, during an investigation into
"the grave deterioration" of human rights
throughout the country, the London-based
organization said.
"We were not able to see her," Amnesty
International's researcher on Burma, Donna
Guest, said on Monday (Dec. 22) in a taped
interview after emerging from the largest
nation in mainland Southeast Asia.
"The way that we characterize her status is that
she is being held in de-facto house arrest," said
Ms. Guest, an American working at Amnesty's
London headquarters.
"What we mean by de-facto house arrest is that
it's not entirely clear whether she is being held
under 10-B of the 1975 State Protection Act
which allows for up to five years detention
without charge, trial or judicial appeal," Ms.
Guest said.
When Amnesty International asked the regime
to allow a meeting with Mrs. Suu Kyi, "we were
told the time was not right," Ms. Guest said. "We
had no contact with her, direct or indirect."
Burmese authorities forced Mrs. Suu Kyi to
return to her home in the capital, Rangoon, in
September after detaining her elsewhere in
response to a deadly clash in May between her
pro-democracy supporters and opponents in
northern Burma's Depayin town, where she was
touring.
Earlier, Mrs. Suu Kyi suffered several years of
house arrest because of her political activity.
Her National League for Democracy (NLD) party
was supposed to govern after its landslide
election victory in 1990 but the military regime
refused to step down and continues to control
Burma, also known as Myanmar.
In addition to Ms. Suu Kyi, more than 1,300
political prisoners are currently behind bars,
Ms. Guest said.
"We are concerned about torture. It is a
continuing concern of Amnesty International,
the issue of torture of political prisoners," Ms.
Guest said. "We noted it," she added, refusing to
elaborate.
"Since our first visit in February 2003, we have
reported the grave deterioration of the human
rights situation in Myanmar, most notably the
violent attack on the National League for
Democracy in Depayin on May 30 [when] at
least four people were killed and dozens of
people were injured in an attack reportedly
instigated by [a] pro-government
organization," Amnesty International said in an
official statement issued on Monday (Dec. 22).
Two Amnesty International representatives
were allowed to visit Burma from Dec. 2 to 19,
including Ms. Guest and Catherine Baber,
Amnesty's deputy program director for the
Asia-Pacific region.
"We were able to meet with Shan people, Chin
people, some Mon people and some Karen
people who represented various ethnic
nationalities' political parties," Ms. Guest told
reporters.
"For security reasons, we are not able to
characterize or name specific individuals, but
we did meet with a broad range of people.
These are people who were very elderly, that
were young, male, female, NLD members,
members of other political parties, journalists,
doctors, lawyers," she said.
"We were only able to interview 35 prisoners"
at three prisons, Ms. Guest said.
During the 17-day trip, Amnesty International
also met Burmese officials including "the home
minister, the deputy foreign minister, police and
prison officials, people concerned with the
administration of justice such as the
attorney-general and the chief justice," she
said.
Ms. Suu Kyi, a 1991 Nobel Peace Prize winner, is
currently the focus of a video campaign by the
music network MTV to free her -- though
Singapore-based MTV Asia said they would not
show the ads in Asia.
The MTV ad, produced in Europe, portrays a
typical teenage girl in a bedroom decorated
with posters and other items, but then the lights
darken, the walls are stripped and the rug
becomes a stone floor -- turning the room into
a grim cell.
"How would you feel if your home was a
prison?" the video says, while displaying a photo
of Mrs. Suu Kyi along with the caption: "Aung
San Suu Kyi is under house arrest".
MTV's video flashes a website address which
offers a written petition to the United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan asking for Mrs.
Suu Kyi's freedom.
In real life, Mrs. Suu Kyi is detained in her large,
furnished, two-story, lakeside villa in Rangoon,
surrounded by a tranquil garden and assisted by
staff.
In 2002, Ms. Suu Kyi asked foreign tourists not to
visit Burma because most of the money they
spend winds up in the pockets of the military
regime which operates much of the tourism
industry.
The British government in 2002 also urged
tourists not to holiday in Burma.
The Burmese regime, however, said tourism
increased during 2003 over the previous year
despite various boycotts against travelling to
the quaint, impoverished, mostly Buddhist
nation.
The Rolling Stones lead singer, Mick Jagger,
recently chartered a plane to fly from Thailand
to Burma on a trip with his girlfriend to the
town of Pagan where ancient pagodas rise from
a vast plain along the majestic Irrawaddy River,
according to one of his hosts in Thailand.
While Mrs. Suu Kyi remains trapped in her
home, some of the politicians who were elected
in 1990 from her NLD party, along with smaller
allied parties, operate through an organization
called the National Coalition Government of the
Union of Burma (NCGUB).
"Our NCGUB headquarters is based in
Washington DC, and we have another two
offices, one is in New Delhi [India] and another is
on the Thai-Burma border," NCGUB Information
Director, Zin Linn, said in a taped interview on
Monday (Dec. 22).
"Also we have an office in the United Nations,"
Mr. Zin Linn said.
"We describe ourselves as a government-in-exile," he added. "She [Mrs. Suu Kyi] is our official leader."
Burma's ruling junta indicated it wants to
create a "road map" toward democracy but is
vague about details, refusing to give a date for
releasing Mrs. Suu Kyi or stepping down from
power.
The regime suggested a new constitution must
first be written, and then fresh elections may
need to be held because politicians who won
seats in the 1990 poll were scheduled to rule for
only five years -- even though they never were
allowed to take their seats in parliament.
The government-in-exile, however, said
because parliament was forbidden from
meeting after the 1990 election, their five-year
term did not start and is still in line to begin
ruling when that ban is lifted.
"According to the 1990 general election, it
[their new government] will start on the
assembly's starting date, and it never
convened," Mr. Zin Linn said.
Copyright by Richard S. Ehrlich
email: animists *at* yahoo dot com
Richard S. Ehrlich, a freelance journalist who has reported news from Asia for the past 25 years, is co-author of the non-fiction book, "HELLO MY BIG BIG HONEY!" -- Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews.
His web page is
http://www.oocities.org/asia_correspondent
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