YANGON, May 20 (Xinhua) -- Trial against Aung San Suu Kyi underhouse
arrest is due to continue Wednesday afternoon for the third day at a special
court in Yangon's Insein Prison with the Myanmar authorities to grant some
foreign diplomats and five foreign mediapersons based in Myanmar to be present
as observers.
This is the first time that the authorities allowed such presence for the
limited number of foreign media persons who obtained their lots to enter the
court out of more than 20 through drawing under the arrangement of the Foreign
Correspondents' Club.
The granted media persons will be allowed to enter into the court only
empty-handed with no cameras, recorders and mobile phones permitted to bring
along.
The two female housemates of Aung San Suu Kyi -- Khin Khin Win and Win Ma
Ma, and American citizen John William Yettaw are also under trial.
Aung San Suu Kyi, 63, General Secretary of the National League for
Democracy (ND), was charged with breaching the authorities' "Security Law
Safeguarding the State Against the Dangers of Subversive Elements" by
accommodating the American tourist and speaking to him who sneaked into her
restricted house for three days from May 3 to 5.
Aung San Suu Kyi's two maids and Yettaw were also charged with supporting
her acts.
Moreover, Yettaw was also separately charged with breaking immigration rule
and Yangon Municipal Acts for swimming across the Inya Lake.
Yettaw, 53, holding American passport and tourist visa, arrived in Yangon
on May 2 and stayed at the Beauty Land Hotel-2. He swam through the Inya Lake
and secretly entered Aung San Suu Kyi's Yangon lake-side house on May 3 night
and left the house on May 5 night.
Yettaw was only arrested on May 6 dawn by Myanmar's security force while he
was swimming back across Inya Lake out of Aung San Suu Kyi's house after three
days' sneaking, according to the authorities.
He was seized with a torch, a pair of folding pliers, a Cannon camera and
some foreign and local currency notes among others.
Yettaw had also once swum across the Inya Lake and entered the barred
residential compound of Aung San Suu Kyi on Nov. 30 last year and passed a book
titled "Book of Mormon" to Aung San Suu Kyi through her two maids.
Yettaw, who is a student of Clinical Psychology of Forest Institute
attending Ph.D, discharged duty as military serviceman for two years.
Aung San Suu Kyi, 63, had been put under detention and later house arrest
at her lake-side residence in Yangon for the third time since the Dabayin
incident in northwestern Sagaing division on May 30, 2003.
Aung San Suu Kyi has spent most of the last 19 years under house arrest since July 1989. She was restricted under the authorities' four orders -- "Restriction Order Against Her Fundamental Rights under Section-7 of the Law to Safeguard the State Against the Dangers of Those Desiring to Cause Subversive Acts", "Arrest Order under Section 10-A, "Prohibition Order under Section 10-B/11" and "Continued Prohibition Order under Section 13/14".