Burma: Will government look into extrajudicial killing of a - TopicsExpress



          

Burma: Will government look into extrajudicial killing of a journalist? Sun, 2014-10-26 07:50 — editor By – Zin Linn Burma’s self-styled political reform currently is at a track of turnaround. The civilian government led by ex-General Thein Sein wants to maintain the country under make-believe democracy while the majority population desires a genuine change. In particular, citizens are demanding freedom of expression and association while the Government is rigidly vetoing the basic rights of the citizens. Freelance Reporter Aung Kyaw Naing alias Par Gyi If the junta is sincere regarding democratic reforms, the journalists must be free at the outset since access to information is essential to a healthy democracy. But in Burma, the political opposition as well as journalists and media personnel are under the strictest controls by the quasi-civilian government. In fact, there has been no enough space for journalists concerning press freedom since the new president has come into office. There have been the customary limitations on media and journalists and also extra restrictions by means of radio and television law. Recently, people were shocked receiving a bad news about Burma army’s brutality against a freelancer. Soldiers from Burma Army shot dead freelance reporter Aung Kyaw Naing alias Par Gyi while the journalist was in military custody, according to a Burma Army’s statement sent to the local Interim Press Council. The journalist had been killed by soldiers from No. 208 Light Infantry Battalion on the outskirts of Kyaikmayaw Township in southeastern Mon State, according to news reports. The statement said Par Gyi was first detained on September 30. He was killed on October 4 and his body was buried at Shwe War Chong, a village some 20 km from Kyaikmayaw, without releasing any information publicly. The question is that why the information was released belatedly. Why did the military itself take responsibility of releasing the statement? Instead, the interim press council relayed the death message of Par Gyi for the militarys information last week. Kyaw Min Swe, editor-in-chief of local newspaper The Voice and the Press Council’s general secretary, told The Irrawaddy on Friday morning that the council had received a statement from the Burma Army on Thursday, informing them of the death of Aung Kyaw Naing, also known as Par Gyi. Whether he was a journalist or an officer from an armed group, this is a human rights violation, Zaw Thet Htway, a member of press council, said Friday to Yangon AP News. We need to find out the truth about what happened, he said. The killing of Aung Kyaw Naing by Burmas military is reprehensible, said Shawn Crispin, CPJs Southeast Asia representative. Civilian authorities must investigate the militarys accounting of his death, which has the initial hallmarks of a cover-up. Any soldier found responsible for his extrajudicial killing or mistreatment before his death must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. According to the The Irrawaddy News, Aung Kyaw Naings wife, Than Dar wants her husband’s body back. The authorities had not informed her of her husband’s death officially as yet, Than Dar said. I dont want any wives or daughters to suffer like we suffer. I will proceed with the charges (against the army) for torture and death, said Than Dar, who is a political activist. The Irrawaddy had previously quoted her saying that she had filed a missing persons report and a complaint of possible kidnapping with police in the area where he disappeared. Aung Kyaw Naings wife and several of his colleagues may demand to establish an independent civilian investigation in order to find out the facts of the murder for an open trial. In January 2014, the Government of Myanmar stated their intention to sign the UN Convention Against Torture (UNCAT). Their stated timeframe was to sign this in September 2014, but remains unsigned, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma), known as AAPP, a human rights organization based in Mae Sot, Thailand. Despite the promise to sign the UNCAT, accounts of torture by various authorities continue to come from all parts of the country, Political Prisoners have been subjected to this treatment for years, in detention centers, interrogation centers, prisons and police stations. The brutal physical and psychological oppression of those who have the courage to campaign for basic civil liberties in Burma/Myanmar has not stopped, nor have any significant actions been taken to prevent it. There were cases of torture that have happened throughout 2014, and reveal the pretexts and prejudices under which many people are detained and abused, AAPP said. The government of Burma needs to intervene immediately to end the use of torture in the conduct of the ongoing conflict areas in the ethnic states. It should convincingly scrutinize and prosecute members of the Burma Army, Police Force, and Military Intelligence who are guilty for the ruthless crime against humanity. If the government wanted to recover its reputation, all soldiers found guilty for this extrajudicial killing and tortures before Par Gyi’s death must be prosecuted by all measures of the law in the presence of the public. Unless this unlawful killing of a citizen came to a decision fairly, people will not regard the current government as a civilian administration. - Asian Tribune - asiantribune/node/85724
Posted on: Tue, 28 Oct 2014 11:08:38 +0000

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