Kuwait Times

Myanmar junta to release more than 9,000 prisoners

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Myanmar’s junta announced an amnesty for more than 9,000 prisoners on Thursday, part of an annual release to mark the country’s Independen­ce Day. The traditiona­l event comes as the army, which took power in a military coup in 2021, faces growing resistance from allied groups in the country’s north. A coalition of ethnic armed groups has said it has captured military positions and border hubs vital for trade with China, posing a serious threat to the junta, according to analysts.

Independen­ce Day in Myanmar has previously been marked by a parade in the capital Naypyidaw, followed by an address from junta chief Min Aung Hlaing. But the junta leader was absent this year, leaving a subordinat­e to read prepared remarks in his stead.

In a statement Thursday, the State Administra­tion Council, as the junta calls itself, said it had “granted amnesty to 9,652 prisoners from respective prisons and jails as a gesture for the 76th Independen­ce Day and to respect the peace in peoples’ hearts and minds”. There was no immediate indication that political detainees were among those to be released.

In a separate statement, the junta said that 114 foreign prisoners were among those granted amnesty and would be deported “on bilateral relations and humanitari­an grounds”. No further details were given.

In the commercial capital Yangon, friends and family members of prisoners gathered outside Insein prison, where detainees were to be released. Myanmar declared independen­ce from British colonial rule on January 4, 1948, after a long fight championed by General Aung San, ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s father. — AFP

 ?? ?? YANGON: Relatives celebrate with a released prisonLY V\[ZPKL 0UZLPU WYPZVU VU 4`HUTHY»Z 0UKLWLUKLU­JL Day in Yangon on Jan 4, 2024. — AFP
YANGON: Relatives celebrate with a released prisonLY V\[ZPKL 0UZLPU WYPZVU VU 4`HUTHY»Z 0UKLWLUKLU­JL Day in Yangon on Jan 4, 2024. — AFP

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