The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Junta to free 23,000 inmates

- — AFP

The junta is planning to release more than 23,000 prisoners nationwide, an official said Saturday, even as the military continues to detain and issue arrest warrants for anti-coup dissidents.

YANGON: The junta is planning to release more than 23,000 prisoners nationwide, an official said Saturday, even as the military continues to detain and issue arrest warrants for anti-coup dissidents.

Myanmar typically grants an annual amnesty to thousands of prisoners to mark its traditiona­l Buddhist New Year holiday – which in previous years have been joyous affairs with citywide water fights.

But this year, with the military back in power after ousting civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, anti-coup activists have used the holiday as an opportunit­y to protest the growing death toll and mass arrests.

It remains unclear whether anti-junta protesters or journalist­s jailed covering the coup will be among those freed.

A prison official told AFP on condition of anonymity that jails across the country will start freeing more than 23,000 people on Saturday.

“We will release more than 800 prisoners from Insein prison” in commercial hub Yangon, he added, declining to elaborate.

In February, the junta released a similar number of prisoners, with some rights groups at the time fearing the move was to free up space for opponents of the military as well as cause chaos in communitie­s.

On Wednesday, a rebel group executed a man who had been freed in that amnesty, who it said had subsequent­ly raped and killed a five-year-old girl.

Just before Armed Forces Day, the regime also freed around 900 jailed demonstrat­ors.

But since the Feb 1 coup, more than 3,100 people – the bulk of them anti-coup protesters and activists – have been detained, according to local monitoring group Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners.

The junta has issued nightly arrest warrants on state-run media, targeting celebritie­s, influencer­s, journalist­s and prominent activists with large social media followings.

By Friday night, they totalled 380.

Some 80 doctors have also been named as wanted fugitives for attempting to “deteriorat­e peace and stability”.

Myanmar’s healthcare workers have been at the forefront of a nationwide civil disobedien­ce movement, refusing to return to work under a military regime.

Their absence has left many of the country’s hospitals unstaffed during the pandemic.

The country has been under the junta’s control for 11 weeks.

The military has consistent­ly justified the putsch by alleging widespread fraud in November’s elections, which Suu Kyi’s party had won in a landslide.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Relatives wait for the bus carrying prisoners to be released outside Insein Prison in Yangon as thousands of inmates were freed nationwide to mark the country’s traditiona­l Buddhist New Year holiday.
— AFP photo Relatives wait for the bus carrying prisoners to be released outside Insein Prison in Yangon as thousands of inmates were freed nationwide to mark the country’s traditiona­l Buddhist New Year holiday.

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