Google – AFP, 11 December 2013
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A
schoolgirl walks past the gates of the Insein Prison in Yangon,
Myanmar on July
23, 2013 (AFP/File, Ye Aung Thu)
|
Yangon —
Myanmar on Wednesday freed 44 political detainees, a presidential adviser said,
the latest in a series of prisoner amnesties by the country's reformist regime.
There are
still thought to be dozens of activists behind bars in Myanmar, which has won
international acclaim for dramatic changes since the end of outright military
rule nearly three years ago.
"In
total 44 political prisoners have been released around the country today,"
Hla Maung Shwe told AFP.
Hundreds of
dissidents have been freed since 2011 and President Thein Sein has pledged to
release all prisoners of conscience by the end of the year.
The former
general, who took power in March 2011, has earned plaudits and the removal of
most western sanctions for reforms that have included freeing hundreds of
critics detained under the previous junta.
Under his
leadership, the nation has undergone huge changes including the election of
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi to parliament.
But
campaigners say authorities continue to prosecute dissidents under legislation
that is either old or does not meet international standards, particularly for
protesting without permission.
About 44
more political detainees are still in jail, according to Bo Kyi of the
Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma).
He said a
further 200 activists are awaiting trial, some of whom are locked up.
"The
government should create rule of law and space for demonstration," said Bo
Kyi, who is a member of a government-appointed committee tasked with
identifying political prisoners.
"As
long as there are arbitrary detentions, there will be political
prisoners."
Before
Myanmar's reforms, rights groups accused the then-junta of wrongfully
imprisoning about 2,000 political opponents, dissidents and journalists.
Arbitrary
imprisonment was a hallmark of the junta, which denied the existence of
political prisoners even as it imposed harsh punishments on rights activists,
journalists, lawyers and performers.
Campaigners
accuse the government of using the headline-grabbing prisoner releases for
political gain and leverage with the international community.
The latest
amnesty came as foreign dignitaries gathered in Myanmar's capital for the
opening ceremony of the Southeast Asian Games.
Thein Sein,
who has won international praise and the removal of most Western sanctions for
reforms, announced during his first visit to London in July there would be
"no prisoners of conscience in Myanmar" by the end of the year.
The country
pardoned 69 inmates in November as it hosted several top-level international
delegations, including from the European Union.
Soon
afterwards, a United Nations rights committee called on Myanmar to stick to its
pledge to free political inmates as it passed a toned-down version of its
annual resolution on the former pariah state.
Many of
those released on Wednesday were connected to the country's ethnic conflicts,
Bo Kyi said.
As part of
reforms Thein Sein's government has reached tentative peace deals with most
major armed ethnic minority rebel groups in the country, which has been racked
by civil wars since independence from British colonial rule in 1948.
But
fighting in the northern state of Kachin, near the border with China, has
continued since a 17-year ceasefire broke down in June 2011, leaving tens of
thousands displaced.

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