Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Aung San Suu Kyi Is Gravely Ill And The World Must Act


(MENAFN- Asia Times) Kim Aris, the youngest son of 80-year-old Aung San Suu Kyi, in recent days told The Independent (UK) that his mother - Myanmar's imprisoned democracy leader and Nobel Peace Prize laureate - is gravely ill with worsening heart disease.

He condemned her treatment by the country's coup-installed junta as“cruel, life-threatening and unacceptable,” and insisted that“she must be freed.”

“Without proper medical examinations, it is impossible to know what state her heart is in... I am extremely worried. There is no way of verifying if she is even alive,” Aris said.

Suu Kyi is now in her fifth year of solitary confinement, the fourth time she has been detained by Myanmar's military rulers over the past three decades. More than 20 years of her life have been stolen by revolving door generals who fear her popularity and moral authority.

Reuters, The Irrawaddy, the Democratic Voice of Burma and other credible news outlets have since amplified the alarm, underscoring the seriousness of Suu Kyi's condition and the magnitude of the moment.

Let us not overlook the weight of her son's words. She must be freed. Not later, not after negotiations, not at some vague point of political transition - but now.

Myanmar in chains

On February 1, 2021, Myanmar's military staged a coup and overthrew the nation's lawful, democratically elected leadership.

President Win Myint, State Councilor Suu Kyi, ministers and other parliamentarians were all imprisoned, disappeared or killed. The nation's democracy was snuffed out for all to see in broad daylight.

Myanmar has since descended into widespread state-sponsored violence and repression. Villages, monasteries and schools have been bombed into rubble. Civilians are habitually hunted, tortured, executed or disappeared.

Untold millions are in desperate need of aid. At least three million have been driven from their homes. An entire nation is being starved, torched and erased, in full view of a watching world.

The statistics are staggering. More than 29,000 people - boys and girls, men and women, monks and nuns, artists, teachers, civil servants, grandmothers - have been arrested, brutalized or executed for daring to stand for freedom. More than 22,000 remain behind bars in Myanmar's notorious prisons.

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