Burma court rejects Suu Kyi’s appeal to end her house arrest

Burma court rejects Suu Kyi’s appeal to end her house arrestYangon, Oct. 2 : A court in military-ruled Burma has thrown out opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi''s appeal against her house arrest sentence.

According to the Daily Express, Suu Kyi had appealed against her conviction in August for breaking terms of her last period of house arrest.

But government sources said the Rangoon division court had ruled against the appeal.

Already in detention for about 14 of the last 20 years, Suu Kyi was sentenced to another 18 months of house arrest for sheltering an uninvited American at her home for two days in May.

John Yettaw, the American sheltered by Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi, had said he swam across a lake to her house because he wanted to warn her that he had a "vision" that she would be assassinated.

He was sentenced to seven years in prison but released on humanitarian grounds and deported to the US less than a week after the verdict.

Suu Kyi''s lawyer Nyan Win said before the ruling that the defence would take the case to the Supreme Court if her appeal was rejected.

In the appeal, Suu Kyi''s lawyers raised no new substantive arguments that had not been heard in the original district court trial.

Burma''s courts almost always follow the same hard line towards Suu Kyi and the country''s democracy movement, which the military government often accuses of collaborating with the country''s enemies to destroy the nation. (ANI)