The Sun (Malaysia)

Reporters charged under secrets act

> Reuters duo had worked on Rohingya crisis coverage

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YANGON: Two Reuters journalist­s were formally charged by police in a Myanmar court yesterday with breaching a colonialer­a secrecy law that carries up to 14 years in jail, despite calls for their immediate release.

Myanmar nationals Wa Lone, 31, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 27, were arrested a month ago under the Official Secrets Act after they were allegedly given classified documents by two policemen over dinner.

The pair had been reporting on the military campaign in Rakhine that has forced some 655,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee over the border to Bangladesh since August.

The UN and US have condemned the violence as ethnic cleansing.

The issue is incendiary inside Myanmar, where authoritie­s deny wrongdoing and say the army was cracking down on militants from the minority community.

A district judge said police charged the pair under a section of the Official Secrets Act which punishes anyone who “obtains, collects, records or publishes ... any official document or informatio­n” which could be “useful to an enemy”.

The pair will return to court on Jan 23 for legal arguments, when the bench will decide whether to accept the case under Myanmar’s arcane legal system.

There were emotional scenes in the Yangon courthouse, with family members in tears and the reporters making desperate pleas before being led back into detention.

“Please tell the people to protect our journalist­s!” Kyaw Soe Oo shouted to the court.

His colleague Wa Lone said his wife is pregnant, adding: “I’m trying to be strong.”

Their families have suggested the pair were set up, saying the arrests took place immediatel­y after leaving the restaurant where they dined with the two policemen. The officers are also under arrest but did not appear in court yesterday.

The case against the Reuters journalist­s has shocked Myanmar’s embattled press corps.

Reporters covering yesterday’s proceeding­s wore black in protest against their arrest and carried banners proclaimin­g “Journalism is not a crime”.

Defence lawyer Khin Maung Zaw said an applicatio­n for bail had been rejected.

Reuters said they were “extremely disappoint­ed” that the authoritie­s were seeking to prosecute.

“We view this as a wholly unwarrante­d, blatant attack on press freedom,” said Reuters editor-in-chief Stephen J. Adler.

“We believe time is of the essence and we continue to call for Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo’s prompt release.”

Rights groups condemned their continued detention, calling on the charges to be dropped and the duo released. – AFP

 ??  ?? Kyaw Soe Oo (left) and Wa Lone arrive at court in Yangon yesterday.
Kyaw Soe Oo (left) and Wa Lone arrive at court in Yangon yesterday.

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