Business World

Myanmar whistle-blower sentenced to jail

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YANGON — A Myanmar police officer who shocked observers by testifying against his force when he described their effort to “entrap” two Reuters journalist­s has been sentenced to jail, a police spokesman said Monday.

Deputy police major Moe Yan Naing was brought out as a prosecutio­n witness earlier this month in a pre- trial hearing against the journalist­s, who face up to 14 years in prison for possessing classified documents.

The policeman surprised the courtroom, including the prosecutio­n, when he broke rank and described how his colleagues were ordered by a senior officer to “get” reporter Wa Lone by handing him sensitive documents at a meeting.

The 32- year- old Myanmar journalist and his colleague Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, have been detained since they were arrested in December after the meeting, in a case that has ignited global alarm over slipping press freedoms.

The policeman’s testimony was an extremely rare case of a security official openly challengin­g superiors in the formerly junta-run country.

On Monday a police spokesman confirmed that Moe Yan Naing was jailed for breaching a police disciplina­ry act — a charge he had been facing before delivering the testimony.

Police sources said he was sentenced before he gave his testimony.

“He was sentenced because he told others about informatio­n concerned with the police force without permission,” Police Colonel Myo Thu Soe told AFP.

“He was found to have breached the police disciplina­ry act,” he added.

Moe Yan Naing’s wife told AFP she was informed of her husband’s sentencing on Sunday night.

“The police told me yesterday ( Sunday) evening that he had been sent to Insein prison to face a year-long sentence,” Tu Tu said through tears.

Less than 24 hours after her husband gave the testimony on April 20, Tu Tu and her children were evicted from their police housing in the capital.

A police spokesman denied any connection between the two events, saying it was a “coincidenc­e.”

The case against the Reuters reporters has brought Myanmar’s fledgling democracy — emerging from decades of military rule — under intense internatio­nal scrutiny.

At the time of their arrests the reporters were investigat­ing security officers’ roles in the extrajudic­ial killing of 10 Rohingya men in northern Rakhine, the site of an army crackdown that the UN says amounts to ethnic cleansing of the Muslim minority.

Some 700,000 Rohingya have fled to neighborin­g Bangladesh since the army- led campaign was launched last August, ostensibly to combat Rohingya insurgents.

The stateless group has faced decades of systematic discrimina­tion and persecutio­n in mainly Buddhist Myanmar.

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