Yahoo – AFP, Hla-Hla Htay,April 8, 2016
![]() |
| Newly-released political student protesters and family members reunite in Myanmar on April 8, 2016 after a court freed dozens of activists (AFP Photo/Ye Aung Thu) |
A Myanmar
court on Friday freed dozens of jailed students, in the first wave of detainee
releases after Aung San Suu Kyi pledged to make freeing activists and political
prisoners a priority of her new government.
There were
jubilant scenes at the sweltering central Myanmar courthouse in Tharrawaddy, as
a judge told the young activists they could go home more than a year after they
were arrested over an education protest that was violently crushed by police in
March 2015.
Tearful
parents gripped their children in emotional scenes before hurrying to the
nearby prison to collect the detainees' belongings.
![]() |
National
League for Democracy (NLD)
party leader Aung San Suu Kyi arrives
at the Union
Parliament in Naypyitaw,
Myanmar March 15, 2016. REUTERS/
Soe Zeya Tun
|
"We
suffered in prison for more than one year. We are happy but we want the new
government to release all political prisoners immediately."
Cases were
cancelled against some 70 student protesters, although three remain in jail
pending other charges.
A further
dozen students will have to wait until their next scheduled hearing to find out
whether they will be freed.
Myanmar has
scores of political prisoners languishing in its jails and hundreds of detained
activists awaiting trial, despite reforms in recent years as the military
loosened its grip on power following half a century of repressive rule.
Suu Kyi had
on Thursday said she would prioritise releasing activists -- an issue laden
with significance for herself and scores of MPs in her party once jailed for
democracy activism during the junta era.
Late
Friday, she released a second statement seeking to reassure that the remaining
student cases would be resolved after Myanmar’s nearly two-week New Year
holiday which starts on Monday.
It added
that political prisoners and jailed activists would also be freed, but that
“necessary scrutinisation” would need to be completed before they could be
released.
Routine
jailing
Court
officials said they began preparing to release the students shortly after Suu
Kyi's statement, which said her government would try to free detainees still on
trial by asking the state prosecutor to drop the charges.
![]() |
Myanmar
student protest leader Min Thawe Thit (centre) is greeted by relatives
as he
arrives for his trial in Tharrawaddy, on April 8, 2016 (AFP Photo/Ye Aung Thu)
|
Those
gathered in Tharrawaddy's dusty courtroom erupted into cheers and song after
the judge delivered his statement, while dozens of police looked on.
Some students
stopped at a cemetery to pay their respects to the graves of other activists
who died in the country's decades-long democracy struggle.
No other
political prisoners were confirmed as released on Friday, though scores of
other detainees were freed from prisons around the country because their
sentences were due to end during the upcoming Buddhist new year holiday.
Human
Rights Watch welcomed the students' release, but urged Suu Kyi and her National
League for Democracy (NLD) party to amend the laws used to imprison peaceful
protesters.
"They
have to release political prisoners but they also have to do away with these
rights-abusing laws. The NLD has an absolute majority in both houses of the
national assembly. They can do this," said Phil Robertson, HRW's deputy
Asia director.
The routine
jailing of dissidents was one of the former junta's most egregious acts,
sparking international outcry and support for Suu Kyi's pro-democracy movement.
![]() |
Relatives
check lists of prisoners due for release at Insein prison in Yangon
on April 8,
2016 (AFP Photo/Romeo Gacad)
|
Suu Kyi
herself spent about 15 years under house arrest and more than 100 current
National League for Democracy lawmakers served time in the country's notorious
prisons.
The
quasi-civilian government that replaced the junta in 2011 freed hundreds of
political detainees, but it also oversaw the detention of scores more,
particularly those involved in land and education protests.
Prior to
Friday there were about 121 political prisoners held in Myanmar's jails and a
further 414 awaiting trial, according to the Assistance Association for
Political Prisoners.
The majority
were arrested before last November's landmark elections, which Suu Kyi's NLD
won in a landslide.
Suu Kyi
made the prisoner release announcement in her broadly defined new position of
state counsellor, which she was given despite vehement opposition from the
still-powerful military whose charter bars her from the presidency.




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.