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  • Myanmar’s Suu Kyi likely to be released from house arrest today

    Published on November 13, 2010

    Myanmar’s democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi is on the verge of being freed from house arrest, officials in the military-ruled country said, as anticipation grew among her legions of supporters.  

     Security was stepped up in Yangon, where Suu Kyi remained confined to her crumbling lakeside mansion, with police vehicles patrolling the city.

     The Nobel Peace Prize winner, locked up for most of the past two decades, is still seen as the biggest threat to the junta, but her freedom appears to be a price it is willing to pay to deflect criticism of elections held on Sunday. 

     “The authorities will release her. It is certain,” a government official told, speaking on condition of anonymity.

      Lawyers for the 65-year-old dissident say her current term of house arrest started with her imprisonment on 14th May last year and so is due to end on Saturday.

     “She will be released for sure as planned,” said another government official who also declined to be named.

     Suu Kyi’s detention was extended by 18 months in August last year over a bizarre incident in which an American swam uninvited to her lakeside home, keeping her off the scene for the first election in 20 years. 

     Her supporters said they expected her to be released but were still awaiting confirmation from the authorities.

     “They cannot extend her detention according to the law,” said one of her lawyers, Nyan Win.

     “They should release her for the country.” The daughter of Myanmar’s founding father General Aung San swept her National League for Democracy (NLD) to victory in elections two decades ago, but the party was never allowed to take power.

      Her supporters have said she will hold a news conference at the NLD’s headquarters if freed, suggesting she is likely to resist any attempt by the authorities to rein in her political activities.

      Some observers believe her release could come with restrictions to ensure she cannot threaten the generals’ hold on power. 

     Nyan Win has suggested she would refuse to accept any conditions on her release, as in the past when she tried in vain to leave Yangon in defiance of the junta’s orders.

     Dozens of supporters gathered at the NLD’s headquarters, where a banner hung alongside two portraits of their leader read “The time is here for the release of Aung San Suu Kyi.” 

     Some NLD members were planning to donate blood to a local hospital to mark her release.

      When the softly-spoken but indomitable opposition leader was last released in 2002 she drew huge crowds wherever she went a reminder that years of detention had not dimmed her immense popularity.

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