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Aung San Suu Kyi has been moved from a Myanmar prison to house arrest due to heat wave

Aung San Suu Kyi delivers a speech with flowers in front of her and flags behind
Aung San Suu Kyi, then Myanmar’s leader, delivers a speech in 2020. She has been moved from her prison to house arrest as a health measure, the military government said.
(Aung Shine Oo / Associated Press)
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Myanmar’s jailed former leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been moved from prison to house arrest as a health measure due to a heat wave, the military government said. On Wednesday it also granted amnesty for more than 3,000 prisoners to mark this week’s traditional New Year holiday.

Suu Kyi, 78, and Win Myint, the 72-year-old former president of her ousted government, were among the elderly and infirm prisoners moved out of prison because of the severe heat, the military government’s spokesperson, Maj. Gen. General Zaw Min Tun, told foreign media representatives late Tuesday. The move has not yet been publicly announced in Myanmar.

A nationwide conflict in Myanmar began after the army in 2021 ousted the elected government, imprisoned Suu Kyi and began suppressing nonviolent protests that sought a return to democratic rule.

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Suu Kyi has been serving a 27-year prison term in the capital, Naypyidaw, on a variety of criminal convictions that her supporters and rights groups say were fabricated for political reasons. Win Myint was serving an eight-year prison sentence in Taungoo in Myanmar’s Bago region.

Myanmar’s meteorological department said Naypyidaw saw the temperature climb to more than 102 degrees Fahrenheit on Tuesday afternoon.

Zaw Min Tun, the military spokesman, did not say where the released prisoners were being moved to in his remarks to U.S.-government funded Voice of America and Britain’s BBC. Before being sent to prison, Suu Kyi was reportedly held in a military safe house inside an army base.

Other prisoners were released for Thingyan, the Myanmar New Year holiday, state-run MRTV television announced Wednesday, but it wasn’t immediately clear if those released included pro-democracy activists and political prisoners who were detained for protesting army rule.

MRTV said that the head of the ruling military council, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, had pardoned 3,303 prisoners, including 28 foreigners who will be deported from Myanmar. He also reduced sentences for others. Mass amnesties on the holiday are not unusual in Myanmar.

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