The district court ruling has now raised the possibility of the country’s most
popular political leader – her National League for Democracy won a landslide
in a series of by-elections in April – being forced to share the home which
has become a symbol of her persecution by the army her father founded.
Its previous poor security was blamed for Aung San Suu Kyi’s house arrest
being extended in 2009 after an American sympathiser swam to it across Lake
Inya to highlight her case.
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