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Amnesty urges Suu Kyi government to end cycle of repression

Amnesty International urged Aung San Suu Kyi and her party's new government to release all political prisoners when they take office next week, saying Thursday that Myanmar's historic transition is an opportunity to break away from the repression of the former junta rule.

 
Thu, March 24, 2016

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Amnesty urges Suu Kyi government to end cycle of repression Myanmar's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi (center) speaks with aide Htin Kyaw (left) as she addresses her supporters from the front gates of her home after her release from house arrest in Yangon, Myanmar, Nov. 13. (AP/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

Esther Htusan

Associated Press/Yangon, Myanmar

Amnesty International urged Aung San Suu Kyi and her party's new government to release all political prisoners when they take office next week, saying Thursday that Myanmar's historic transition is an opportunity to break away from the repression of the former junta rule.

"Myanmar's legal framework reads like a textbook of repression, and authorities have in recent years increasingly used it to silence dissent," Champa Patel, Amnesty International's Southeast Asia director, told reporters.

Serious questions remain unanswered about the new government's power to improve human rights given that the constitution keeps several key institutions under the military's control, including the ministries of home affairs, which oversees the police, defense and border affairs.

Amnesty's report, based on interviews with human rights defenders, activists, lawyers, and prisoners of conscience and their families, documents the widespread crackdown on political opponents in the past two years. It said the government has relied on draconian laws and other intimidating tactics to silence dissent.

Suu Kyi led her National League for Democracy party to a historic win in the Nov. 8 elections, and will replace a nominally civilian, military-backed government that has been in power since 2011. Before that, Myanmar was ruled by the military since 1962.

During that time, the junta kept Suu Kyi under house arrest for several years, and jailed hundreds of her supporters and other critics. While the government has released more than 1,100 detainees over the years, some remain in jails.

Amnesty International says it knows of almost 100 political prisoners still behind bars, while hundreds of other activists are in detention or waiting for their trials to end.

The outgoing government and Suu Kyi's party have not yet commented on the report.

Amnesty also called on the new government to review all cases and ensure no peaceful activists are imprisoned and to amend or repeal all laws used to crack down on human rights.

The NLD's willingness to free prisoners of conscience is not in doubt, but it may not be able to do so: The Corrections Department is under the military-controlled Ministry of Home Affairs.

Even after "we have the new government and parliament, they will not have the full authority to manage the country," said Bo Kyi of the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners. "The Constitution says the commander-in-chief is the most powerful person in the country."

The laws themselves have also been applied in ways that add to their severity against dissenters and activists. In one such case, Htin Kyaw is serving 13 years and 10 months for distributing leaflets criticizing the government. He was charged with the same offence separately in all 11 townships where he handed out the leaflets.

"It would have been really graceful if [outgoing] President Thein Sein had released all the political prisoners before the end of his term," said Robert San Aung, an advocate for political activists on trial. 

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