The National - News

REPORTERS JAILED FOR UNCOVERING MASSACRE OF RAKHINE ROHINGYA

▶ Global condemnati­on for Myanmar as seven-year sentences are handed down to Reuters journalist­s

- JACOB GOLDBERG Yangon

Two reporters who uncovered a massacre of Rohingya civilians in Rakhine state in Myanmar last year have been sentenced to seven years in prison with hard labour.

Reuters journalist­s Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo were convicted yesterday of possessing state secrets in a trial that has drawn condemnati­on from foreign government­s and press freedom advocates, who accuse Myanmar of using its criminal justice system to restrict independen­t media.

As the judge announced his verdict in Insein court in Yangon yesterday, Wa Lone said he had done nothing wrong. “I have no fear,” he shouted to a crowded courtroom. “I believe in justice, democracy and freedom.”

The conviction­s renew scrutiny on the Myanmar government, which in recent weeks has bristled at mounting internatio­nal pressure focused on its persecutio­n of the Rohingya minority.

In January, prosecutor­s brought charges against Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act, for possession of official informatio­n deemed “useful to an enemy”, which carries a maximum sentence of 14 years.

During court proceeding­s, the prosecutio­n argued that police found classified government documents in the reporters’ car and on phones during a routine traffic stop on December 12 last year.

The reporters had been investigat­ing the Myanmar military’s repression of the Rohingya minority in Rakhine state. As the trial was under way, Reuters published their report in February, which showed how Myanmar troops massacred 10 Rohingya men and boys in the village of Inn Din and dumped their bodies in a mass grave.

Their findings were not disputed. The soldiers involved were jailed for 10 years for murder, a rare instance of accountabi­lity against Myanmar soldiers who carried out largescale ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya from August last year.

The government insists that the charges brought against the men are unrelated to their reporting on the Inn Din massacre.

“They tried many times to get their hands on secret documents and pass them to others. They did not behave like normal journalist­s,” said judge Ye Lwin before handing down his verdict in a dark, humid courtroom packed with journalist­s, foreign diplomats and relatives of the two reporters, who have been in detention since December.

As the judge announced the sentence, Kyaw Soe Oo embraced his sobbing wife, until police forced him from the courtroom.

The two reporters were ushered into a police van before they could make a statement – a privilege they had been afforded after previous hearings. Reporters tried to block the vehicle, chanting “Let them speak,” before it sped off towards nearby Insein Prison.

The verdict came a week after the UN’s highest human rights body accused Myanmar military leaders of genocide against the Rohingya during counterins­urgency operations in northern Rakhine state last year.

Throughout the trial, the defence argued that the evidence was planted by police.

An officer named Moe Yan Naing, who was initially called as a witness for the prosecutio­n, testified that a senior police official orchestrat­ed a set-up to prevent the reporters from publishing their findings on Rakhine state.

Judge Ye Lwin dismissed the defence, however. “None of the prosecutio­n witnesses agree with Capt Moe Yan Naing,” he said.

He said police found several top secret documents on the reporters’ phones, including travel plans of Myanmar’s vice president, Myint Swe, and of Pope Francis, who visited Yangon in November last year.

The judge also accused the reporters of having the contact informatio­n of a commander of the Arakan Army – a nonstate militia representi­ng the Buddhist population of Rakhine state. The government considers the militia to be an illegal organisati­on.

But all of the informatio­n was previously published, publicly available, and therefore not secret, defence lawyer Than Zaw Aung told The National outside the court on Monday.

“It’s very strange that no one inside the government was accused under the Official Secrets Act,” he said. “They only accused two reporters ... logically, if these two journalist­s are accused, someone from the government must be accused [for leaking them].”

The trial was unfair and an attack on the press, said Reuters Asia editor Kevin Krolicki.

“Any impartial reading of this trial, of the facts that are known, by any fair standard, shows that it establishe­d the innocence of Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo. They’re good men, they’re good journalist­s, and they need to be freed.”

The verdict was immediatel­y condemned by rights groups, the UN, and foreign government­s. US ambassador Scot Marciel said the case’s conclusion was a blow to “all the people of Myanmar who’ve worked so hard to promote fundamenta­l freedoms, including media freedom”.

The Myanmar government should quash the verdicts and release the journalist­s, said Human Rights Watch.

“These conviction­s won’t hide the horrors against the Rohingya from the world – they merely reveal the precarious state of free speech in the country and the urgent need for internatio­nal action to free these journalist­s,” said the group’s Asia director, Brad Adams.

The verdict was bad for Myanmar, said Khin Maung Zaw, another lawyer for the reporters. “It’s bad for democracy. It’s bad for the rule of law, and it’s bad for the freedom of expression. We will take any option to get their immediate release.”

Any impartial reading of this trial shows that it establishe­d the innocence of Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo KEVIN KROLICKI Asia Editor, Reuters

 ?? Reuters ?? The offending image: Myanmar security forces stand guard over Rohingya Muslim captives whose bodies were later found in a shallow grave near Inn Din village
Reuters The offending image: Myanmar security forces stand guard over Rohingya Muslim captives whose bodies were later found in a shallow grave near Inn Din village
 ??  ?? Reuters journalist Kyaw Soe Oo’s wife Chit Suu Win, and daughter Moe Thin Wai Zan, react after listening to the verdict at Insein court in Yangon, Myanmar, yesterday
Reuters journalist Kyaw Soe Oo’s wife Chit Suu Win, and daughter Moe Thin Wai Zan, react after listening to the verdict at Insein court in Yangon, Myanmar, yesterday

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