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Myanmar Conducting Political Campaign Against Independent Journalism: UN
12 Sep, 2018 / 12:06 PM / Reeny Joseph

Source: http://www.omnesmedia.com

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The United Nations said that Myanmar is conducting a political campaign against free and fair journalism. The country is already facing international outrage over the jailing of Reuters journalists for their reporting on a massacre of Rohingya Muslims, the UN commented.

A fresh report from the UN rights office decried “the instrumentalization of the law and of the courts by the government and military in what constitutes a political campaign against independent journalism.”It slammed the “failure of the judiciary to uphold the fair trial rights of those targeted.”

The rights office pointed to the “particularly outrageous” and high-profile example of the conviction of Reuters journalists Kyaw Soe Oo and Wa Lone. Last week, a judge jailed the two — both Myanmar nationals — for seven years under a draconian state secrets act over their reporting of the Rohingya crisis.

Around 700,000 of the stateless Rohingya Muslim minority were driven into Bangladesh by a Myanmar army-led crackdown in August last year. The UN report said there were many other examples of detentions and prosecutions of journalists and their sources, indicating “wider trends of suppression of freedom of expression.”

According to the report, laws on telecommunications, official secrets, unlawful association, electronic transactions, import-export and aircraft have been used against journalists in a number of cases.It pointed to one case, where three journalists were arrested in June 2017 after covering a “drug burning” ceremony in connection with the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking.

The event took place in area under the control of the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) in northern Shan state.Even though the journalists were covering events unrelated to the armed conflict, they were charged under the so-called unlawful association act. The report pointed out that the act is “routinely used to allege that any contact with an ethnic armed group is tantamount to a criminal offense.”

The report said that in Myanmar it has become “impossible for journalists to do their job without fear or favor.”
UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet warned in a statement that the situation was “hardly conducive to a democratic transition” in Myanmar. Bachelet asked the authorities to take necessary steps to help the journalists for a free and fair reporting.