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The court handed down a two-year sentence to Suu Kyi for breaching the export-import law by possessing the handheld radios and one year for having a set of signal jammers.
The sentencing was the first in a series of cases in which the 76-year-old Nobel laureate is being prosecuted since the army seized power on Feb 1, preventing her National League for Democracy party from starting a second five-year term in office.
He was the first western journalist sentenced to prison in recent years in Myanmar, where a military coup had overthrown an elected government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.
Many residents of the town have fled, according to accounts on social media.
Children were among those killed on Saturday, Myanmar's Armed Forces Day, according to news reports and witnesses, in a crackdown that drew renewed criticism from Western countries and was denounced by the US envoy as "horrifying".
National League for Democracy leader Dr Win Naing said that the military was deliberately shooting protesters in the head to keep the vital organs intact.
"It was horrible. People were shot before my eyes. It will never leave my memory," said one photojournalist on the scene who did not want to be named.
India shares a 1,600 km land border with Myanmar, where more than 50 people have been killed during protests against the coup.
The bloodshed occurred one day after neighbouring countries had called for restraint in the aftermath of the military's overthrow of the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi.
Myanmar has been in chaos since the army seized power and detained elected government leader Aung San Suu Kyi and much of her party leadership on February 1, alleging fraud in a November election her party won in a landslide.