Families of jailed reporters appeal for release

Published September 5, 2018
Yangon: Pan Ei Mon (top left), wife of Reuters journalist Wa Lone, Chit Su Win (top right), wife of Reuters journalist Kyaw Soe Oo, and Khin Maung Zaw (bottom left), lawyer of the detained Reuters journalists, talk to reporters during a press conference on Tuesday. A Myanmar newspaper (bottom right) displays the story about the sentences received by the Reuters journalists on its front page.—Agencies
Yangon: Pan Ei Mon (top left), wife of Reuters journalist Wa Lone, Chit Su Win (top right), wife of Reuters journalist Kyaw Soe Oo, and Khin Maung Zaw (bottom left), lawyer of the detained Reuters journalists, talk to reporters during a press conference on Tuesday. A Myanmar newspaper (bottom right) displays the story about the sentences received by the Reuters journalists on its front page.—Agencies

YANGON: The wife of one of two Reuters journalists jailed in Myanmar made an emotional appeal Tuesday to Aung San Suu Kyi to free her husband for the sake of their young daughter, as the leader comes under increasing criticism for her silence on the case. Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, were arrested while reporting on atrocities committed during the military’s bloody expulsion of some 700,000 Rohingya Muslims last year.

A Yangon court on Monday found them guilty under the Official Secrets Act and sentenced them to seven years in prison, sparking outrage from the UN, EU and US as well as media and rights groups.

Kyaw Soe Oo’s wife Chit Su Win, 23, broke down in tears as she asked the Nobel Peace Prize laureate to release her husband, the father of their three-year-old daughter. “I want my husband to come back,” she said. “I cry when my daughter asks me why her father is not with us. She asks me, ‘Does he not love me?’”

A UN report last week accused Suu Kyi of failing to use her moral authority to stem the violence last year and called for the generals to be prosecuted for “genocide”.

Her silence on the case and the verdict — the sternest test in recent years to free speech in the country — has shredded her reputation even further.Lawyers for the pair will appeal the verdict although the lengthy process will take months, if not years.

The country’s president, a close ally of Suu Kyi, could also pardon the reporters but experts say any immediate intervention is unlikely.

Erstwhile Suu Kyi advocates overseas have been left dismayed by her attitude to the journalists’ ordeal. Her one public reference to the Reuters journalists during the court case — telling Japanese broadcaster NHK that the pair had broken the Official Secrets Act — was criticised by rights groups for potentially prejudicing the verdict.

Wa Lone’s wife Pan Ei Mon described the families’ sadness on seeing the interview, saying that was the moment they “realised that she didn’t know about the case clearly”.

While the case horrified the West, domestically it garnered little public attention despite its implications for press freedom.

Response to the jailing was mixed. State-backed media barely mentioned the verdict on Tuesday although other papers stood in solidarity with the reporters.

A publication called 7Day News branded it a “sad day” for Myanmar and carried a large black rectangle on its front page.

The English version of the Myanmar Times ran a full front-page photo of Kyaw Soe Oo, calling the verdict “a blow to press freedom” although its Myanmar-language sister paper was more muted, simply urging the overhaul of obsolete laws.

Published in Dawn, September 5th, 2018

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