Bangkok Post

Ruling on reporters’ phone evidence due

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YANGON: A Myanmar judge was set to rule yesterday whether to allow the submission of evidence police say they obtained from the mobile phones of two Reuters reporters arrested in December for alleged possession of secret documents.

The court in Yangon has been holding hearings since January to decide whether Wa Lone 32, and his Reuters colleague Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, will be charged under the Official Secrets Act, which carries a maximum penalty of 14 years in prison.

On Monday, Judge Ye Lwin ordered Major Aung Kyaw San, a police IT expert summoned by the prosecutio­n, to demonstrat­e how he says he extracted data from phones taken from the reporters after their Dec 12 arrest.

The order was made after Aung Kyaw San read out extracts from documents he said had been stored on the devices. Prosecutor Kyaw Min Aung then asked the judge to accept printed copies of the documents as evidence in what has become a landmark free speech case in Myanmar.

Defence lawyers objected, arguing the police major had not demonstrat­ed the documents had indeed been extracted from the reporters’ phones, prompting the judge to rule that Aung Kyaw San must give additional testimony before they could be admitted as evidence.

“Tomorrow, that expert witness will come and by looking at the phone handset and laptop that were seized from the defendants, he will explain how he extracted [the documents] ... whether it’s technicall­y correct,” defence lawyer Khin Maung Zaw told Reuters after the hearing.

Aung Kyaw San did not say how the 21 documents he identified in court — some allegedly confidenti­al government letters, others documents related to a tourism developmen­t plan — were relevant to the case.

“I couldn’t understand the situation because they are submitting unknown documents which we don’t even know,” said Wa Lone, standing on the steps of the court before being shoved to the back of a police pickup truck.

Myanmar government spokesman Zaw Htay was not immediatel­y available for comment. Previously, he has said Myanmar courts were independen­t and the case would be conducted according to the law.

At the time of their arrest, the reporters had been working on an investigat­ion into the killing of 10 Rohingya Muslim men and boys in a village in western Myanmar’s Rakhine state. The killings took place during an army crackdown that United Nations agencies say sent nearly 700,000 people fleeing to Bangladesh.

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