9 June 2026 By MPA
NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar — A prominent pro-military politician has claimed that Myanmar’s ousted democratic leader, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, has been moved to a comfortable, air-conditioned residence with round-the-clock access to medical specialists—a narrative that critics insist is a calculated propaganda stunt aimed at obscuring severe threats to her life.
The claims were made by Hla Swe, the Naypyidaw chairman of the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP)—locally notorious by his moniker “Bullet” Hla Swe—during a filmed meeting with U Ottamathara, a controversial Buddhist monk known for his overt alignment with the ruling military council.
Hla Swe asserted that the 80-year-old Nobel laureate, who has been held in strict solitary confinement since the February 2021 coup, was recently relocated from her previous detention facility inside the perimeter of the 6th Military Operations Command (MOC-6) to a superior residential property.
“She has been moved to a much better house equipped with sofa chairs and air conditioning units, allowing her to live in total comfort,” Hla Swe told the monk. He further claimed that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s overall health remains stable, downplaying her medical issues as minor, age-related dental discomfort. “A team of military medical specialists is closely monitoring her condition, conducting comprehensive checkups, and providing immediate treatment,” he added.
When pressed on whether any other independent observers had been granted access to verify her condition, the USDP official stated he possessed no further granular details.
The sudden claims regarding Suu Kyi’s welfare have triggered profound skepticism and intense anxiety among the Myanmar public, given Hla Swe’s history of violent rhetoric.
Just two months ago, on 18 April, Hla Swe published a viral video message across social media platforms openly advocating for the absolute elimination of opposition leaders. Citing administrative methods utilized by authoritarian regimes in Russia, China, and Cambodia, the USDP leader argued that a state could only achieve stability by completely executing its political rivals.
Similarly, the monk with whom he orchestrated the interview, U Ottamathara, has faced fierce public condemnation. In June 2023, the monk visited the late National League for Democracy (NLD) patron U Tin Oo, aggressively urging that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi permanently abandon politics and confine herself to spiritual peace—a move widely viewed as a coordinated psychological operation managed by the junta’s intelligence apparatus.
Independent rights watchdogs and NLD officials have repeatedly demanded that the military high command allow independent medical professionals and international diplomatic delegations access to the ousted State Counsellor, noting that she has been denied all external communication for years.
In a political environment where regular legal parameters have collapsed, analysts warn that the junta frequently uses proxy figures to broadcast unverified statements regarding high-profile political prisoners. Rather than reassuring the public, the fact that a politician who recently called for the assassination of opposition figures is now delivering updates on Suu Kyi’s health has heightened fears that her life remains in critical, immediate danger under military custody.





