(AFP) – 2 days ago
The jailed reporter had worked with the Myanmar exile broadcaster "Democratic Voice of Burma" based in NorwayBANGKOK — A Myanmar court has handed down a 20-year jail term to a video journalist who worked with exiled media, rights groups said Wednesday, as the ruling junta continues its crackdown on dissent.
Freelance reporter Hla Hla Win, 25, was arrested in September after visiting a Buddhist monastery in the northern town of Pakokku, Paris-based Reporters Without Borders and the Burma Media Association said in a joint statement.
Hla Hla Win was sentenced by a court in Pakokku on December 31 for an alleged violation of the country's Electronics Act, the groups said. A man accompanying her was sentenced to 26 years in jail, they added.
There was no immediate confirmation of the sentence from authorities in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, which remains under tight US and EU sanctions because of its record on human rights.
"We are outraged that this young woman has been given a 20-year jail term," the two organisations said in the statement.
The jailed reporter had worked with the Myanmar exile broadcaster Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), based in Oslo, Norway.
She had already been sentenced in October to seven years in jail under the export-import act for allegedly using an illegally imported motorcycle, the groups said.
"All these laws are just an excuse to punish her for the work she was doing as a (undercover) journalist within Burma," said DVB's Oslo bureau chief Aye Chan Naing.
Myanmar's junta chief Than Shwe said plans were underway for elections promised by the regime some time this year
Reclusive junta leader Than Shwe said at an independence day ceremony on Monday that plans were underway for elections promised by the regime some time this year, but warned citizens to make "correct choices" at the polls.
"People had been expecting signs of an opening and goodwill gestures from the military junta in this election year, but this extremely severe sentence on a 25-year-old video maker and the junta chief's recent threatening comments leave little hope that the elections will be free," the groups said.
Reporters Without Borders said at least 13 journalists and bloggers were currently detained in Myanmar.
"The very dangerous work carried out by Burma's video reporters... is crucial for the dissemination of independent, propaganda-free information both domestically and abroad," they said.
Hla Hla Win went on hunger strike for several days after her arrest and had to be hospitalised for an unspecified period, said the statement.
Myanmar has handed heavy jail terms to scores of activists, monks, student leaders and journalists for their alleged roles in anti-junta protests in 2007 and for helping victims of Cyclone Nargis in May 2008.
Pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi has been detained for most of the last two decades and had her house arrest extended in August last year, effectively ruling her out of the coming elections.
The United States expressed doubt Monday that the polls would be credible.
Source: http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jCFnxqL1gwqsFOrPpD-q5e3Qeu4A
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