The Borneo Post

Drone-flying camera crew freed from jail in Myanmar

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YAMETHIN, Myanmar: Foreign and local journalist­s jailed for flying a drone near Myanmar’s parl iament were released yesterday after spending two months in prison, in a case that spiked alarm over an increasing­ly dangerous climate for reporters in the country.

Lau Hon Meng from Singapore and Mok Choy Lin from Malaysia were on assignment for Turkish state broadcaste­r TRT when they were detained in late October along with Myanmar journalist Aung Naing Soe and driver Hla Tin.

The crew was shoot ing a documentar­y in Myanmar’s capital Naypyidaw.

Expecting to receive a fine, they confessed to flying the drone but were instead sentenced to two months in jail under Myanmar’s aircraft act.

The group was released from a jail yesterday north of the capital after a court dropped additional charges that carried between three and five more years in prison.

“They were all released this morning at 7.00am from Yamethin prison,” lawyer Khin Maung Zaw told AFP.

He added that the two foreign journalist­s were being taken directly to Yangon internatio­nal airport for f lights out of the country, while the two Myanmar nationals have already been reunited with their families.

Aung Naing Soe, the local reporter who spent his 27th birthday behind bars, said he hoped other detained journalist­s in Myanmar would soon be released too.

At least 11 reporters have been arrested in the former junta-run country in 2017.

Several have been released but two Reuters journalist­s remain in custody and are facing up to 14 years in prison under the draconian colonial- era Official Secrets Act for allegedly possessing classified documents.

Wa Lone, 31, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 27 — Myanmar nationals who had been reporting for the news agency on a military- led crackdown on Rohingya Muslims — were arrested a fortnight ago after they were invited to meet police for dinner.

They were remanded in custody for a further two weeks after an emotional reunion with family members at a brief court hearing on Wednesday — the first time the pair had been allowed access to relatives, colleagues or lawyers.

“I also hope and demand that the other similar cases like us ... will be set free,” Aung Naing Soe told AFP, adding that authoritie­s have not returned his crew’s phones, computers or drone.

The TRT crew’s arrest came with ties more strained than ever between Myanmar and Turkey, whose president has lambasted the mainly Buddhist nation over its persecutio­n of Rohingya Muslims. — AFP

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