The Jerusalem Post

Myanmar junta says 1,600 prisoners to be freed in holiday amnesty

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Relatives of hundreds of prisoners gathered outside Myanmar’s Insein Prison on Sunday after the military government announced the release of 1,600 prisoners in an amnesty to mark the Southeast Asian nation’s New Year.

The number of prisoners released in the annual amnesty was a fraction of last year’s 23,000. It was unclear whether it would include jailed members of the civilian government overthrown in a February 1, 2021 coup.

A local reporter on the scene told Reuters that no political protesters had been released so far from Insein.

Lt.-Gen. Aung Lin Dwe, a state secretary of the junta, signed a statement announcing “1,619 prisoners, including 42 detained foreigners, will be released under the Amnesty as part of the celebratio­n of Myanmar’s new year, to bring joy for the people and address humanitari­an concerns.”

The military has arrested at least 13,282 people and killed 1,756 opponents since the coup, according to the Assistance Associatio­n of Political Prisoners (AAPP) activist group.

Among those detained are the ousted government’s leader, Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, being held in the capital Naypyidaw, and her Australian economic adviser, Sean Turnell, who is in the Insein facility on the outskirts of Yangon.

“The junta uses the political prisoners as hostages,” an AAPP spokesman told Reuters on Sunday. A spokesman for the junta, which has disputed AAPP’s figures, did not respond to a request for comment.

Standing near plaincloth­es police on Sunday, nervous-looking families held placards with names of their loved ones, said the local reporter, who asked not to be named for security reasons.

The mother of a 22-year-old protester arrested eight months ago told the reporter she was waiting outside Insein after her son wrote saying he might be released in an April amnesty.

Another mother, whose police officer son was arrested in June for participat­ing in the Civil Disobedien­ce Movement against the junta, said she had waited outside the prison several times during previous amnesty periods.

“I have a feeling he will be freed today,” she added, asking not to be named for fear of retaliatio­n, the reporter said. (Reuters)

 ?? (Assistance Associatio­n for Myanmar-Based Independen­t Journalist­s/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE WAIT outside Insein Prison in Yangon, Myanmar yesterday, hoping that family members arrested in anti-coup protests will be released.
(Assistance Associatio­n for Myanmar-Based Independen­t Journalist­s/Reuters) PEOPLE WAIT outside Insein Prison in Yangon, Myanmar yesterday, hoping that family members arrested in anti-coup protests will be released.

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