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Myanmar to free 70 prisoners

Published: 24 Jul 2013 - 03:28 am | Last Updated: 05 Feb 2022 - 10:44 am

YANGON: Myanmar agreed to release some 70 political prisoners yesterday, an official said, after President Thein Sein vowed to free all dissidents by the end of the year.

The move, the latest gesture of reform by the former general who has ushered in a period of sweeping change in the country, was greeted with caution by activists concerned that authorities are continuing to prosecute dissidents.

“The president has signed an amnesty for about 70 political prisoners around the country,” presidential adviser Hla Maung Shwe, a senior official at the Myanmar Peace Center said.

Last week Thein Sein said there would be “no prisoners of conscience in Myanmar” by the end of the year during his first visit to London as part of a European tour aimed at burnishing Myanmar’s international image.  Rights groups and officials estimate there were between around 100 and 150 political prisoners in Myanmar ahead of yesterday’s announcement.

Activists welcomed the release, but voiced concern over new arrests in the country.

“Even if we welcome this release, we are very concerned because of the new trials, they continue to send new (political prisoners) to jail,” said Bo Kyi of the Thailand-based Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (Burma), which collects data on imprisoned activists. He said around 80 convicted dissidents remain behind bars, according to AAPP estimates, with a further 70 people awaiting trial. 

One of those released in the amnesty, Brang Shawng, was only arrested last week in a camp for those internally displaced and held on suspicion of involvement with armed ethnic minority fighters from northern Kachin state.

Hla Maung Shwe said around 27 of those being released were rebels from Kachin, where the government is working on brokering a crucial ceasefire deal. He said some prisoners had already been freed. The military junta, which ruled Myanmar with an iron fist for decades, had long denied the existence of political prisoners.

AFP