Aung San Suu Kyi sentenced to further 18 months house arrest (10/08/2009)
The Prime Minister has expressed his sadness and anger after hearing the verdict of the 'sham trial' of Aung San Suu Kyi.
Aung San Suu Kyi will now serve a further one and a half years under house arrest. She has already spent 13 of the past 19 years under house arrest.
Gordon Brown said the verdict was a political sentence aimed at preventing Aung San Suu Kyi from taking part in elections planned for next year.
Foreign Office Minister, Ivan Lewis, speaking on the BBC's Today Programme and BBC World News, called the verdict a 'tragedy for Burmese people', and backed the Prime Minister's call for toughened sanctions against the regime in Burma. Listen to the interview on the Radio 4 website.
Read the transcript of Ivan Lewis's interviews on Radio 4 Today Programme and BBC World News.
The verdict has been widely condemned by political leaders across the world. The EU, under the Swedish Presidency, urged the authorities to immediately and unconditionally release her and called for 'targeted measures against those responsible for the verdict'.
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
also said that 'unless she and all other political prisoners in Myanmar are released and allowed to participate in free and fair elections, the credibility of the political process will remain in doubt'.
Read the PM statement
"I am both saddened and angry at the verdict today, 11 August , following the sham trial of Aung San Suu Kyi.
The news - that she has been found guilty and sentenced to three years hard labour but that this has been “mitigated” to a suspended sentence of 1.5 years under house arrest - is further proof that the military regime in Burma is determined to act with total disregard for accepted standards of the rule of law and in defiance of international opinion.
This is a purely political sentence designed to prevent her from taking part in the regime’s planned elections next year. So long as Aung San Suu Kyi and all those political opponents imprisoned in Burma remain in detention and are prevented from playing their full part in the political process, the planned elections in 2010 will have no credibility or legitimacy.
The façade of her prosecution is made more monstrous because its real objective is to sever her bond with the people for whom she is a beacon of hope and resistance.
I have always made clear that the United Kingdom would respond positively to any signs of progress on democratic reform in Burma. But with the generals explicitly rejecting that course today, the international community must take action.
The EU has agreed to impose tough new sanctions targeting the economic interests of the regime.
I also believe that the UN Security Council - whose will has been flouted - must also now respond resolutely and impose a world wide ban on the sale of arms to the regime.
My thoughts today are with Aung San Suu Kyi - the human face of Burma’s tragedy - and with the people of Burma who suffer on a daily basis."
Notes for Editors
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