Dayton Daily News

Myanmar’s treatment of journalist­s under fire

Suu Kyi’s stance on press freedoms now drasticall­y different.

- By Todd Pitman

When five BANGKOK —

Myanmar journalist­s were sentenced to decadelong prison terms for reporting the alleged existence of a military-run chemical weapons factory in Myanmar a few years ago, Aung San Suu Kyi then an opposition

— lawmaker condemned

— the harsh punishment­s as “very excessive.”

The journalist­s, from the now-defunct Unity publicatio­n, had been convicted for violating the nation’s Official Secrets Act — the same colonial-era law now being leveled against a pair of Reuters reporters who are facing a staggering 14 years behind bars each.

“It’s not that I don’t accept a concern over national security,” Suu Kyi told supporters during a July 2014 rally, according to an article published at the time in the Irrawaddy, a local media outlet. “But in a democratic system, security should be in balance with freedom.”

When “the rights of journalist­s (to report) are being controlled,” Suu Kyi said, the very notion of democratic reform in Myanmar is “questionab­le.”

Three and a half years on, the thinking of Suu Kyi, who now heads the government, has apparently changed dramatical­ly. Rather than champion the press, she has presided over an administra­tion whose courts have aggressive­ly pursued legal charges against dozens of journalist­s, along with other attempts to suppress and discredit the media.

Police arrested Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo on Dec. 12 while they were investigat­ing the massacre of 10 ethnic Rohingya Muslims in the village of Inn Din by the Myanmar military and Buddhist villagers. The Reuters story included photos provided by a Buddhist village elder of the 10 captives lined up in a row, kneeling, and later of their bloodied bodies in a shallow grave. The reporters further supported their account with testimony from Buddhist villagers who confessed to burying bodies and killing Muslims, and also from security personnel and the paramilita­ry police themselves.

But when former U.N. ambassador Bill Richardson met Nobel Peace prize laureate Suu Kyi this month and brought up the case against the Reuters reporters, it “brought almost an explosion on her part,” Richardson said.

Suu Kyi’s spokesman, Zaw Htay, has said that Richardson exceeded his mandate by bringing up the issue. Richardson had been invited to the country to participat­e in an advisory panel on the Rohingya crisis; he withdrew, calling it a “whitewash.”

Htay did not answer his cell phone when AP attempted to reach him several times Wednesday for comment.

Hostility against the media, particular­ly internatio­nal news agencies covering Myanmar, has risen markedly since a brutal army “clearance” operation began in August immediatel­y after Rohingya insurgents staged an unpreceden­ted wave of attacks. More than 700,000 Rohingya, a persecuted minority widely despised by the nation’s Buddhist majority, have been driven into Bangladesh since.

Reporters and human rights groups covering the crisis have documented grave atrocities, including mass rape, several massacres and widespread arson attacks that left hundreds of Rohingya villages burned to the ground. Earlier this month, The Associated Press reported the existence of at least five mass graves at Gu Dar Pyin village in Rakhine state.

Suu Kyi’s government has routinely denied atrocities and staunchly defended the military’s actions, portraying critical media reports as “fake news” in what analysts say is an effort to discredit independen­t media reports and limit reporting.

They’re “doing everything in their power to block the flow of news, to ensure that no damaging informatio­n comes to light,” said Shawn Crispin, Southeast Asia representa­tive for the New Yorkbased Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

“They’re using legal threats, they’re blocking access to areas where alleged abuses occurred, they’re making it harder for foreigners to get visas,” he said. “They’ve created a climate of fear among local reporters, too, and the message is clear. If you report critically, you risk going to jail.”

As the antagonism against foreign media has grown, some agencies pulled reporters from the country. AP correspond­ent Esther Htusan left Myanmar in late November after threats were made against her life on social media and unidentifi­ed men followed her to her Yangon home.

Not so long ago, the mood in the Southeast Asian nation was very different.

When the military, which ruled for half a century, ceded some power to a nominally civilian government in 2011 amid what was widely lauded as a long-awaited transition to democracy, journalist­s were bursting with optimism. The government abolished censorship in 2012, allowing local media outlets to flourish for the first time in decades. Foreign correspond­ents were granted visas, enabling them to report on what had been one of the most closed nations in the world.

The Associated Press was among those allowed in. The news cooperativ­e maintained a presence in Myanmar and covered the nation for decades through local correspond­ents. But in 2013 AP became the first internatio­nal news agency to officially open a bureau since the transition from military rule began.

The optimism reached its peak when Suu Kyi’s party swept elections in a 2015 landslide.

“There was so much hope that local journalist­s were finally going to be free to report, and Suu Kyi was to be their champion,” Crispin said. “But Suu Kyi has become a menace to the media, and she’s very much put her individual stamp on this wave” of repression.

At least 33 reporters have been charged with crimes under various laws since Suu Kyi’s government assumed office in 2016, according to the local advocacy group We Support Journalist­s. The numbers are likely higher than during the era of military rule because many more journalist­s are operating today.

Besides the Official Secrets Act, reporters have been charged for violating the Unlawful Associatio­n Act, under which three were detained several months last year for covering a drug burning event organized by a small rebel group. Reporters have also been charged under Article 66(d) of the Telecommun­ications Law, which broadly defines defamation and carries a penalty of up to three years’ imprisonme­nt.

The telecommun­ications law in particular has been employed to crush freedom of expression, said Maung Saungkha, an independen­t researcher with We Support Journalist­s. About 80 other people, including activists and protesters, have been charged under the law. Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party holds a majority in parliament and has the power to amend or abolish such legislatio­n.

The government has also tried to cast doubt on media reports about the Rohingya. Last month, the AP published an investigat­ion documentin­g the existence of five mass graves in the village of Gu Dar Pyin that witnesses said were filled with Rohingya corpses slaughtere­d by army soldiers with help from local Buddhists. The AP investigat­ion relied on multiple interviews with more than two dozen survivors in Bangladesh refugee camps, time-stamped cellphone videos and satellite imagery that showed how the entire village had been wiped out.

The government launched its own investigat­ion in response, and in a statement cited local villagers and community leaders declaring that “no such things happened.” Security forces, it said, killed 19 “terrorists” and “carefully buried” them.

In an editorial, the staterun Global New Light of Myanmar condemned the AP report, saying “the credibilit­y of the media is lost when they fail to seek the truth and ensure accuracy in their reporting.” The editorial, however, did not mention that Myanmar does not allow independen­t media into northern Rakhine state. The only trips journalist­s are permitted to take part in are those occasional­ly allowed by the government, which often deploys minders to monitor them and curtail their movement.

“What the government doesn’t understand is how profession­al reporting happens,” Crispin said. “If they want to get the truth out, they need to open everything up, let reporters in, and let them publish what they find ... They’re not doing that, and everyone knows they won’t have a shred of credibilit­y until they do.”

 ?? THEIN ZAW / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Reuters journalist Wa Lone is escorted by Myanmar police upon arrival at the court for trial on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar, on Feb. 1.
THEIN ZAW / ASSOCIATED PRESS Reuters journalist Wa Lone is escorted by Myanmar police upon arrival at the court for trial on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar, on Feb. 1.

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