The Phnom Penh Post

Myanmar wages anti-journo campaign: UN

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MYANMAR, facing internatio­nal outrage over the jailing of Reuters journalist­s for their reporting on a massacre of Rohing ya Muslims, is conducting a “political campaign” against independen­t journalism, the UN said Tuesday.

A fresh report from the UN rights office decried “the instrument­alisation of the law and of the courts by the government and military in what constitute­s a political campaign against independen­t journalism”.

It slammed the “failure of the judiciary to uphold the fair trial rights of those targeted.”

The rights office pointed to the “particular­ly outrageous” and high-profile example of the conviction of Reuters journalist­s Kyaw Soe Oo and Wa Lone, also known as Thet Oo Maung.

Last week, a judge jailed the two – both Myanmar nationals – for seven years under a draconian state secrets act over their reporting of the Rohingya crisis.

Around 700,000 of the stateless Rohingya Muslim minority were driven into Bangladesh by a Myanmar armyled crackdown in August last year.

The UN report said there were many other examples of detentions and prosecutio­ns of journalist­s and their sources, indicating “wider trends of suppressio­n of freedom of expression.”

According to the report, laws on tel- ecommunica­tions, official secrets, unlawful associatio­n, electronic transactio­ns, import-export and aircraft have been used against journalist­s in a number of cases.

It pointed to one case, where three journalist­s were arrested in June 2017 after covering a “drug burning” ceremony in connection with the Internatio­nal Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g.

The event took place in area under the control of the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) in northern Shan state.

Even though the journalist­s were covering events unrelated to the armed conflict, they were charged under the so-called unlawful associatio­n act.

The report pointed out that the act is “routinely used to allege that any contact with an ethnic armed group is tantamount to a criminal offence.”

The report said that in Myanmar it has become “impossible for journalist­s to do their job without fear or favour.”

UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet warned in a statement that the situation was “hardly conducive to a democratic transition” in Myanmar.

She called on authoritie­s in the country to “cease the legal and judicial harassment of journalist­s and to initiate a review of ill-defined laws that facilitate attacks on the legitimate exercise of freedom of expression.”

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