ASEANEWS-CIVIL WAR | YANGON, Myanmar: Still no bidders for historic home of ousted Myanmar leader Suu Kyi

FILE – Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi, right, and US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton walk through the garden after meetings at Suu Kyi’s residence in Yangon, Myanmar on Dec. 2, 2011. PHOTO: AP

.

.

..         

FREE ASEAN
FREE MYANMAR/CAMBODIA/THAILAND /LAOS
FREE Aung San Suu Kyi 

.

BANGKOK (AP) — A fourth attempt by Myanmar’s authorities to sell by the home of imprisoned former leader Aung San Suu Kyi by auction failed Tuesday when there were no bidders for the property, where she famously was held under house arrest for almost 15 years, a legal official said.

It was not immediately clear if the floor price — the equivalent of tens of millions of dollars — was simply too high or whether warnings by opponents of Myanmar’s military government not to buy the house substantially dampened demand.

The 1.9-acre (7,700 square meter) family property on Inye Lake in Yangon, the country’s largest city, is viewed by many in Myanmar as a historic landmark because of its close association with Suu Kyi’s long nonviolent struggle against military rule for which she won the Nobel Peace Prize.

.

An auction official reads a statement outside the gate of the family house of detained Myanmar civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon. PHOTO: AFP

A legal official familiar with the case, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to release information, said there had been no bidders at the court-ordered auction held in front of the gates of the property, which once served as an unofficial headquarters for Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party.

The auction followed a bitter decades-long legal dispute between Suu Kyi and her estranged older brother, Aung San Oo, who sought an equal division of the property.

Proceeds from the sale were supposed to be split between her and him. Suu Kyi’s lawyers had challenged the auction order.

The floor price on Tuesday was set at Ks270 billion, which is more than USD128 million at official rates, or about USD62 million at black-market rates, which better reflects the real value of Myanmar’s currency. It had been reduced from its previous floor price of Ks297 billion, about USD141 million at the official exchange rate, for the last failed auction in February last year.

Opponents of army rule have publicly discouraged the sale, seeing it as part of the persecution of Suu Kyi, who was arrested in February 2021 when the military seized power from her elected government. They say the property — where Suu Kyi hosted US President Barack Obama, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and others — is a cultural heritage that must not be sold, demolished or redeveloped.

Many business people with the wherewithal to make multi-million dollar purchases are widely seen as cronies of the ruling military. However, buying the property would make them targets of forces opposed to army rule.

Several business figures and bureaucrats have been assassinated by opponents of military rule during Myanmar’s civil war, which has pitted the army against resistance forces comprising pro-democracy fighters and ethnic minority guerrilla groups.

.

The property and its two-story colonial-style building was given decades ago by the government to Suu Kyi’s mother, Khin Kyi, after her husband, independence hero Gen. Aung San, was assassinated in July 1947.

Suu Kyi, 79, remained there after her 2010 release from house arrest until moving in 2012 to the capital, Naypyitaw, to serve in parliament. She became the nation’s leader after a 2015 general election. She is currently serving a 27-year prison sentence after a series of cases brought by the military. Her lawyers have not been allowed to meet with her since they last saw her since December 2022.

According to legal procedures, the court will continue to handle the auction process, but the details are not yet available.

.
….

.

Auction of Suu Kyi’s Myanmar mansion fails for fourth time

 .
.
YANGON (AFP) – Myanmar authorities failed to auction off Aung San Suu Kyi’s lakeside mansion on Tuesday – the fourth time the sale of the jailed Nobel peace laureate’s property has attracted no bidders.

A court-appointed auctioneer emerged from the rusty gate of the sprawling two-storey pile on Yangon’s leafy University Avenue Road to offer it at a discounted USD128 million starting price.

.

Surveyed by a gaggle of journalists and around a dozen police, the auctioneer asked for bidders three times before proclaiming: “We hereby announce that the auction is not successful.”

Suu Kyi has been jailed since being deposed by a 2021 military coup but spent years under house arrest at the historic property during a previous period of junta rule.

After lengthy legal wrangling her estranged brother has won the rights to half of the villa. Its sale is being overseen by junta-appointed officials and Suu Kyi is entitled to half of the proceeds.

During her house arrest at 54 University Avenue Road, Suu Kyi would make speeches at the boundary fence – drawing crowds of hundreds with lofty rhetoric about democracy and non-violent resistance.

Myanmar’s decade-long democratic experiment saw Suu Kyi become the elected figurehead after her release in 2010, and the colonial-era home was where she steered its nascent civilian government.

.

.

An auction official reads a statement outside the gate of the family house of detained Myanmar civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon. PHOTO: AFP

As the country began to recover from pariah status it saw a series of landmark visits from foreign leaders including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

Since the military snatched back power, Suu Kyi has been jailed in the capital Naypyidaw on a litany of charges critics have slammed as farcical and designed to remove her from politics.

Real estate agents say similar-sized properties in upmarket Yangon areas might fetch USD1 million to USD2 million.

.

With Myanmar’s economy shattered by the civil war triggered by the military coup, it is unclear who in the country would be in a position to spend USD128 million on a single, increasingly dilapidated property.

It was first put up for sale in March 2024 for MMK315 billion – USD150 million based on the official exchange rate – but has been incrementally discounted in each of the three auctions since then.

.

.CLIMATE CHANGE

Ads by:
Memento Maxima Digital Marketing
@[email protected]
SPACE RESERVE FOR ADVERTISEMENT

.

.

It's only fair to share...Share on FacebookShare on Google+Tweet about this on TwitterEmail this to someonePrint this page