The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Myanmar government defends detention of journalist­s

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YANGON: Myanmar’s civilian government yesterday defended the detention of three journalist­s who were reporting on an armed ethnic group, an incident that has fuelled alarm at the erosion of press freedom.

The journalist­s were among seven people detained by the military on Monday as they left a drugs-burning ceremony organised by the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), one of several rebel groups fighting the state.

The journalist­s, who have been held incommunic­ado since then, included reporters from The Irrawaddy and DVB, which for years challenged the former junta’s iron grip on free expression with their covert reporting.

They are expected to be charged under the Unlawful Associatio­ns Act, under which a meeting with ‘unlawful associatio­ns’ is punishable by up to three years in prison.

The legislatio­n was widely used by the former military junta who stepped down in 2011, paving the way for the pro-democracy party of former activist Aung San Suu Kyi to take power last year.

“It’s true that they broke the law by going to meet ethnic groups,” Suu Kyi’s senior aide Win Htein, himself a former political prisoner, told the Central News Bureau broadcaste­r.

He said it was wrong for the army to initiate proceeding­s but insisted that ‘the government should take action’ against the journalist­s.

The military said Monday the group was stopped near Phayargyi village in the eastern state of Shan, not far from where TNLA fighters have been clashing with the army. Several soldiers and four insurgents have been killed since fresh fighting erupted last week after troops discovered a training camp for the ethnic armed group, state media reported yesterday.

The clashes come just weeks after Suu Kyi met several ethnic insurgent groups, including the TNLA, at talks aimed at ending decades of fighting in Myanmar’s borderland­s.

“Getting peace is more important than amending this (Unlawful Associatio­ns) Act,” said Win Htein.

The detention of the journalist­s has drawn condemnati­on from activists and diplomats concerned at growing curbs on press freedom. The Committee to Protect Journalist­s’ Asia Program coordinato­r Steven Butler called the arrests an “affront to democracy in Myanmar”.

It comes amid a groundswel­l of activism among local journalist­s aimed at quashing a controvers­ial broadly-worded online defamation law which has been used to curb criticism of the government and army. Prosecutio­ns under the legislatio­n have surged since the National League for Democracy came to power last year, with social media satirists, activists and journalist­s increasing­ly targeted. — AFP

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