Myanmar drops ‘incitement’ charges against journalists
YANGON: A Myanmar court yesterday dismissed a case against three senior journalists from the country’s largest private newspaper, after authorities agreed to drop the charges.
Eleven Media’s chief reporter, Phyo Wai Win, and two editors, Kyaw Zaw Lin and Nayi Min, were arrested on Oct 10 for incitement after publishing an article that quoted lawmakers raising questions over spending by the Yangon city government.
They were freed on bail last month after President Win Myint ordered authorities to try to settle the dispute through negotiation.
“The case was dismissed today (yesterday) at the court,” said defence lawyer Kyee Myint.
“We welcome it.”
Yangon’s regional government is headed by Chief Minister Phyo Min Thein, a protégé of civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and a member of her National League for Democracy party.
He has demanded an apology and said on Thursday he would press ahead with a legal case against the media group if he did not get one through the negotiations, as recommended by the president.
“If the negotiation doesn’t succeed, I will continue the legal process,” he said.
The chief minister’s assistant declined to answer questions over the telephone.
In late 2016, Eleven Media’s chief executive and another editor were detained for nearly two months over a complaint made by Phyo Min Thein over a Facebook post alleging corruption.
Min Thein told a news conference at the time that the allegations were “intended to defame my personal dignity”.
Eleven Media published an apology.
Yesterday, Eleven Media editor-in-chief Zaw Linn said the outlet had no intention of apologising this time.
“There is nothing that went wrong and we have no reason to apologise,” he said.