Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Myanmar freeing ex-UK ambassador, 5,773 other prisoners

The military junta makes a welcome gesture to dissenters

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YANGON, Myanmar (AFP) — Myanmar’s military said Thursday it will release almost 6,000 prisoners including a former British ambassador, a Japanese journalist and an Australian economics adviser who will be deported, in a rare olive branch from the isolated junta.

The Southeast Asian country has been in turmoil since the military’s coup last year and a bloody crackdown on dissent that has seen thousands jailed.

Dozens of foreign nationals have been caught up in the crackdown.

Former British envoy Vicky Bowman, Australian economics adviser Sean Turnell and Japanese journalist Toru Kubota “will be released to mark National Day,” a senior officer told AFP.

All three would be deported, the junta said without specifying a date.

“Altogether, 5,774 prisoners including some 600 women prisoners will be released,” they said, revising an earlier figure of about 700.

In its statement announcing the amnesty, the junta’s informatio­n team did not say how many of those pardoned had been arrested during the military’s crackdown on dissent.

Bowman, who served as ambassador from 2002 to 2006, was detained with her husband in August for failing to declare she was living at an address different from the one listed on her foreigner’s registrati­on certificat­e.

They were later jailed for one year. Her husband, prominent artist Htein Lin, will also be released, the military official said.

Turnell was working as an adviser to Myanmar’s civilian leader Suu Kyi when he was detained shortly after the coup in February last year.

In September, he and Suu Kyi were convicted by a closed junta court of breaching the official secrets act and jailed for three years each.

Kubota, 26, was detained in July near an anti-government rally in Yangon along with two Myanmar citizens and jailed for 10 years.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? PEOPLE for the Ethical Treatment of Animals activists dressed in monkey suits protest outside of the Embassy of Thailand in Washington, DC over the treatment of primates in the Thai coconut industry.
MANDEL NGAN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE PEOPLE for the Ethical Treatment of Animals activists dressed in monkey suits protest outside of the Embassy of Thailand in Washington, DC over the treatment of primates in the Thai coconut industry.

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