The Independent

Briton among nearly 6,000 prisoners freed in Myanmar

- SHWETA SHARMA

Myanmar’s military government has released almost 6,000 prisoners under mass amnesty, including an ex-British diplomat, an Australian economist and a Japanese documentar­y maker, to mark its National Day.

The military junta, which overthrew the democratic­ally elected government in a 2021 coup, said it will grant pardons to the

foreign nationals, including Australian economist Sean Turnell, former UK ambassador Vicky Bowman, Japanese filmmaker Toru Kubota and a US citizen, state media confirmed.

The move represente­d a rare olive branch to the Western countries, many of whom had slapped sanctions on the southeast Asian country following an unpreceden­ted coup last year. The military said that the amnesty was granted on “humanitari­an grounds” and to mark Myanmar’s National Day.

A total of 5,774 male and 676 female prisoners were granted amnesty. The move has elicited relief and is being celebrated by activists, lawyers and family members of the prisoners who were jailed. However, there was no immediate independen­t confirmati­on yet that the four foreign prisoners have been released.

In a carefully worded first remark, Australia’s foreign minister Penny Wong said: “We welcome reports in relation to professor Sean Turnell. Professor Turnell continues to be our first priority. As such, we will not be commenting further at this stage.”

Mr Turnell, who was former adviser to ousted leader and democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi, was detained shortly after the coup and handed three years of jail under the Official Secrets Act. Ms Bowman and Mr Kubota were jailed earlier this year and sentenced to a year and 10 years in jail respective­ly.

Ms Bowman, 56, a fluent Burmese speaker, was UK’s envoy to Myanmar between 2002 and 2006. She was arrested with her husband, a Myanmar national, in Yangon in August. She was given a one-year prison term in September for failing to register her residence.

Japan’s foreign ministry also confirmed they had been informed of Myanmar’s plans to release Mr Kubota, but had no further details other than that the 26-year-old Tokyo-based documentar­y filmmaker was reportedly in good health.

Mr Kubota was the fifth foreign journalist to be detained in Myanmar since the military seized power. He arrived in July to reportedly film a documentar­y about a Myanmarese person and was arrested the same month near an anti-government rally in Yangon. He was handed 10 years in prison on sedition charges and for violating the electronic communicat­ions law.

American national Kyaw Htay Oo, as well as 11 local Myanmar celebritie­s, were among thousands of prisoners who were released, Myanmar’s state-run channel MRTV reported.

Myanmar has been facing increasing diplomatic isolation from Western countries as well as Asian neighbours following the 1 February 2021 coup when the military rolled down tanks and arrested Ms Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s president WinMyint and other leaders of the National League for Democracy, citing election fraud in the November 2020 elections.

In the follow-up, the military unleashed a brutal crackdown on pro-democracy protesters to clamp down on nationwide protests and armed resistance that some UN experts characteri­se as civil war. Indonesia, which is chair of the regional grouping Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations next year, has pledged to take a harder line against the junta.

Among others released were Kyaw Tint Swe, a former union minister for the office of the state counsellor, Than Htay, a former member of the Union Election Commission, and Lae Lae Maw, a former chief minister of the Taninthary­i Region who had been jailed for 30 years for corruption since 2020 under Ms Suu Kyi’s government, MRTV announced.

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 ?? (AFP via Getty) ?? Staff prepare to re l ease inmates from I nsein Prison in Yangon
(AFP via Getty) Staff prepare to re l ease inmates from I nsein Prison in Yangon
 ?? (AP) ?? Australian economist Sean Turnell was an adviser to Aung San Suu Kyi’s toppled government
(AP) Australian economist Sean Turnell was an adviser to Aung San Suu Kyi’s toppled government
 ?? (Tedx Ta l ks) ?? Former UK envoy Vicky Bowman was imprisoned for fai l ing to register her address
(Tedx Ta l ks) Former UK envoy Vicky Bowman was imprisoned for fai l ing to register her address

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