GOOD MORNING MYANMAR…

November 23rd, 2009

The military dictators of Myanmar — known under the Orwellian moniker of the State Peace and Development Council — believe that the best way to control their political opponents is to adhere to the adage: Keep your friends close, keep your enemies closer, and how much closer can you keep an enemy than locked away in a prison?

From PalaungNLD:

Kan Myint, who spent four years in prison in the early 1990’s, was an active member of the commodity protester group, Myanmar Development Committee, whose protests against the sudden hike in fuel prices in September 2007 triggered the uprising.

He was arrested on 8 December 2008 and later handed a 10-year sentence on charges of causing a public riot, and breaching the Immigration Act and Video Act. The leader of the group, Htin Kyaw, is currently serving 12 years and six months in prison.

A source close to Kan Myint’s family said that he was sentenced on 13 November to eight more years in prison on separate under the Unlawful Association Act (17-1) for having link with an unlawful association, and Act (17-2) for involvement with an unlawful association.

This use of the quasi-legal fiction is not unique in Myanmar.

The case mirrors that of another activist, Generation Wave member Nyein Chan, who last month had an eight-year sentence extended by 10 years. He had been caught distributing leaflets to mark the one-year anniversary of the founding of the youth activist group.

Meanwhile, three members of the opposition National League for Democracy party facing trial in Rangoon’s notorious Insein prison special court were yesterday charged with the Unlawful Associations Act, according to lawyer Kyaw Ho.

The members are Ma Cho (also known as Myint Myint San), Sein Hlaing and Shwe Gyo.

Burma currently holds around 2,120 political prisoners, including 244 monks and 270 students, according to the Thailand-based Assistance Association for Political Prisoners

After more than two years and tens of thousands of blog posts, the monks, and others are still bound as tightly as ever.

Leave a Reply

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word