BANGKOK — Staying in different lodgings each night to evade arrest, the lawyer representing Aung San Suu Kyi said her trial will help determine whether Myanmar’s people again become “slaves” of the military.
Soldiers raided the civilian leader’s residence and detained her in pre-dawn raids three weeks ago, effectively ending Myanmar’s 10-year experiment with democracy.
The new military regime has pledged to hold elections in a year, but for now, the junta wields power over all the country’s political institutions — including its courts.
Khin Maung Zaw has been tasked with defending her from a pair of obscure charges for possessing unlicensed walkie-talkies and violating coronavirus restrictions.
“Myanmar is now at a crucial point of history,” the 73-year-old told AFP by phone from Naypyidaw, the country’s capital, while reflecting on weeks of nationwide protests demanding his client’s release.
“If we lose, we will become slaves of the military junta for 40 or 50 years. We have to win this battle.”
The junta has already taken action to purge the country’s top courts of potential Suu Kyi sympathizers, and Khin Maung Zaw’s brief is thoroughly stacked against him.
Despite several requests, he has still not been given permission to see his client ahead of her March 1 hearing.
“If I don’t get permission to meet with her for the hearing, I will let all the world know that the trial is not fair,” he said.
He has also stepped up his own safety precautions, due to “indirect pressures” passed onto him from relatives.
“At night, I have to stay away from my house and I have to stay in other people’s houses,” he told AFP.
‘No reason to be afraid’
Born in 1948 in Pyinmana, a town now on the outskirts of the capital built by an earlier junta, Khin Maung Zaw said he’s used to threats from a powerful military.