Bangkok Post

Junta bans telecom executives from leaving without permit

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Senior foreign executives of major telecommun­ications firms in Myanmar have been told by the junta that they must not leave the country without permission, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said.

A confidenti­al order from Myanmar’s Posts and Telecommun­ications Department (PTD) in mid-June said senior executives, both foreigners and Myanmar nationals, must seek special authorisat­ion to leave the country, the person said.

A week later, telecom companies were sent a second letter telling them they had until yesterday to fully implement intercept technology they had previously been asked to install to let authoritie­s spy on calls, messages and web traffic and to track users by themselves, the source said. Reuters has not seen the orders.

The directives follow pressure on the companies from the junta, which is facing daily protests from its opponents and a growing number of insurgenci­es to activate the spyware technology.

A spokesman for the military did not answer multiple requests for comment. The junta has never commented on the electronic surveillan­ce effort, but announced soon after seizing power its aim to pass a cybersecur­ity bill that would require telecoms providers to provide data when requested and remove or block any content deemed to be disrupting “unity, stabilisat­ion, and peace”. It also amended privacy laws to free security forces to intercept communicat­ions.

The travel ban comes after intensifie­d pressure from military officials to finish the implementa­tion of the surveillan­ce equipment. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals, said the ban was meant to pressure telecom firms to finish activating the spyware technology, although the order itself does not specify a reason.

Three other telecom sources, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said the authoritie­s had stepped up pressure on the companies to implement the intercept, but declined to elaborate further. Two sources said companies had been warned repeatedly by junta officials not to speak publicly or to the media on the intercept.

Telenor declined to comment. There was no immediate response to requests for comment from Ooredoo, stateowned MPT and Mytel, a joint venture between Vietnam’s Viettel and a Myanmar military-owned conglomera­te.

Months before the Feb 1 coup, telecom and internet service providers were ordered to install intercept spyware to allow the army to eavesdrop on the communicat­ions of citizens, Reuters reported in May.

Reuters was not able to establish how broadly the surveillan­ce technology has been installed and deployed, but four sources said Norway’s Telenor ASA and Qatar’s Ooredoo QPSC had yet to comply in full.

Among the military’s first actions on Feb 1 was to cut internet access and it has still not been fully re-establishe­d, with telecoms given regular lists of websites and activists’ numbers to block.

The moves have left the future unclear for Myanmar’s telecom sector, which had been one of the fastestgro­wing globally. Telenor said on Friday it is evaluating the future of its operations in the country, with a source saying it wants to sell off its Myanmar unit.

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