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Prominent Burmese pro-democracy figures part of mass prison release
Nov
19 (AFP)
- Military-ruled Myanmar on Friday freed several prominent opposition party
figures as part of a mass prisoner release one month after a power struggle
ousted the country's premier.
Several members of the opposition National League for Democracy said Win Tin,
a former NLD top executive and confidante to detained party leader Aung San
Suu Kyi, was among those freed, but uncertainty swirled over his fate as others
said he remained at Yangon's Insein prison as of late Friday.
NLD central executive committee member Than Tun said Win Tin was released along with female provincial MP Mey Win Myint, and expected more political prisoners, especially those who were ailing or elderly, to be freed.
Win Tin, 74 and in ill health, has spent the last 15 years behind bars, with several international human rights groups and the United Nations demanding his release.
"Political party members appeared to be released singly and driven away in cars to their homes," an NLD member told AFP outside the gates of Insein prison, where hundreds of people including 100 NLD members had gathered to welcome freed comrades.
"We saw at least four persons including Win Tin being driven away in cars," the member said. Party spokesman U Lwin said he could not confirm the release either.
Diplomats
and observers praised the move as the first gesture of openness by the reclusive
regime that last month dismissed its pragmatist prime minister Khin Nyunt
in favour of a hardline general.
"It is an overture to the international community which has become more
and more stern" in its approach to the junta, which has come under withering
criticism from international quarters, a Western diplomat said.
He stressed however that it was "not possible" that Aung San Suu Kyi or her NLD deputy Tin Oo would be among those freed in the move.
Hundreds of detainees were seen by an AFP correspondent filing out of Insein prison as part of the release of 3,937 inmates ordered Thursday by the junta, which said they may have been wrongfully jailed by a military intelligence unit disbanded in the wake of the political shakeup.
State radio said the detainees were being freed from jails throughout the country, but the lack of detail or mention of who the prisoners were left many guessing as to the junta's motives for the largest prison release in years.
One Yangon-based observer dismissed the release as a ploy to ease widespread international condemnation of the dismissal of prime minister Khin Nyunt and his replacement by a hardline general.
"These are damage-control measures taken by the military hierarchy to negate some of the negative developments here," the observer said.
Prison terms of 3,937 convicts suspended
18 Nov (MNA) —The State Peace and Development Council had already dissolved the National Intelligence Bureau on 22 October, 2004. It was observed that the NIB might have committed irregularities. And according to the review of the irregularities, prison terms of 3,937 convicts have been suspended with effect from today, 18 November 2004, and they will be released from the respective prisons.
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