Yangon: A Junta Myanmar court will give a verdict next month whether it has driven out the leader of Aung San Suu Kyi to violate the rules of Coronavirus during the election of his party won last year, said a source Tuesday.
Myanmar has been in chaos since the February military coup, which triggered great protests and bloody hard acts on differences of opinion.
Suu Kyi, 76, conducted a trial in June, and faced a raft of allegations, including illegally importing Walkie-Talkies, Corruption, and incitement.
The media had been banned from attending the trial in a special court in the capital built by the Naypyidaw military, and Junta recently banned Suu Kyi’s legal team to speak to reporters.
On Tuesday, he appeared at the latest hearing in the trial for allegedly violating the rules of Coronavirus during the 2020 election, a source with knowledge of the problem.
He will testify in his defense next week, the source said, adding “the last command to say the court verdict” was set for December 14.
Suu Kyi faced three years in prison if it was found guilty.
The Junta Court will also hear the closing argument in separate trials for sedition next week because it starts wrapping the process that can see the Nobel Winner imprisoned for decades.
The military has accused that the 2020 election, won by the Suu Kyi National League was won by a landslide – ruffling the military-supported party – hit by fraud.
Junta has threatened to dissolve NLD and continues to increase bloody campaign against opponents to his government.
A Junta Court in the eastern state Karen on Tuesday repeated former NLD parliamentarians and chairman of the Minister Nan Khin Htwe Myint for 75 years in prison with hard work for corruption, his lawyer told AFP.
He did not have a plan to appeal, said Aung Thin said after the trial in prison in the Capital City of HPA.
Last month, won Hyin, a former member of the NLD parliament and closed Suu Kyi Aide, submitted 20 years in prison for betrayal, the first high-ranking member of the party to be imprisoned by the Junta Court.