Tag: Aung San Suu Kyi

  • Myanmar junta mark two-years anniversary with state of emergency extension

    Myanmar junta mark two-years anniversary with state of emergency extension

    Even though the UN has already labelled the promised elections a “sham,” the state of emergency has been extended. New sanctions were also put in place by the US, Canada, the UK, and Australia.

    At Min Aung Hlaing’s request, Myanmar’s already two-year-old state of emergency was extended by another six months on Wednesday, according to state media.

    It happened at the same time as the US and its allies announced new sanctions against the military regime.

    On the second anniversary of the coup that overthrew the nation’s civilian government and resulted in Aung San Suu Kyi’s arrest, the National Defense and Security Council approved the extension.

    The “state of emergency will be extended for another six months starting from February 1,” acting President Myint Swe was quoted as saying. “Sovereign power of the state has been transferred to commander in chief again,” he added.

    State media also reported Min Aung Hlaing as saying on Wednesday that “Our government will work to hold elections in every part of the country so as the people will not lose their democratic right.”

    The UN has warned that the promised elections will likely not be free and fair.

    Junta slammed with new round of sanctions

    Washington, along with Canada and the United Kingdom and Australia on Tuesday imposed sanctions on the Union Election Commission, mining enterprises, energy officials and others, as per a statement by the US Treasury Department.

    The statement said this was the first time the US had targeted Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) officials, the managing director and deputy managing director. It is the country’s single largest revenue-generating state-owned enterprise.

    Mining Enterprise No 1 and Mining Enterprise No 2, both state-owned companies, as well as the Union Election Commission, were also hit with sanctions by Washington.

    Canada targeted six individuals and prohibited the export, sale, supply or shipment of aviation fuel. Australia targeted members of the junta and a military-run company.

    The UK designated two companies and two people for helping supply Myanmar’s air force with aviation fuel used to carry out bombing campaigns.

    The sanctions come as Myanmar’s military has conducted aerial bombings and other attacks against pro-democracy forces. 

    UN warns planned elections likely a ‘sham’

    On the same day, the independent UN special investigator on Myanmar warned that the military junta plans to seek legitimacy by orchestrating a “sham” election this year.

    “You cannot have a free and fair election when the opposition is arrested, detained, tortured, and executed, journalists are prohibited from doing their job, and it is a crime to criticize the military,” Tom Andrews said at the UN.

    Myanmar’s junta last month outlined plans to hold an election later in the year.

    To do that, it is supposed to lift the nationwide state of emergency six months beforehand. Observers had widely expected the military to announce it was preparing for the polls this week, with the state of emergency set to expire on Wednesday’s anniversary. 

    But on Tuesday, the junta-stacked National Security and Defense Council said the state of the country “has not returned to normalcy yet.”

    The statement accused opposition political groups of trying to seize “state power by means of unrest and violence.”

    Membership rules set high bar to qualify

    The junta had recently introduced new rules for parties contesting elections, which include a huge increase in their membership, a move that could sideline the military’s opponents.

    The rules favor the Union Solidarity and Development Party, which was defeated by now-jailed leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party in the 2015 and 2020 elections. The party includes several former military generals.

    The NLD and western nations have denounced the election and said they would not acknowledge the results.

    John Sifton, Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch, told Reuters that the US has still not matched stronger sanctions imposed by the European Union.

    “As a result, the measures taken so far have not imposed enough economic pain on the junta to compel it to change its conduct,” he said.

    Myanmar’s top generals led a coup in February 2021. The country has since seen instability, with a crackdown on dissent.

    According to the independent Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a watchdog group that tracks killings and arrests in Myanmar, 2,940 civilians have been killed and 17,572 have been arrested by authorities since the army takeover.

    NGO reports junta targeted religious sites

    The London-based Myanmar Witness released a report on Wednesday saying troops of Myanmar’s military junta occupied a Catholic Church in Moe Bye and fired shells at civilians seeking refuge at the Mwe Daw Pagoda.

    “Single events such as this help us to understand the bigger picture of daily life in Myanmar,” Dan Anlezark, Deputy Head of Investigations at Myanmar Witness, told DW.

    Myanmar Witness reviewed videos and images captured during a flare-up of fighting in September last year, showing the Mary Mother of God Catholic Church seem to “have been the epicenter of the fighting.”

    The destruction in the town reached a climax on September 16, when the Mwedaw Pagoda, which was providing shelter to people fleeing the fighting, was hit by artillery.

    Footage collected by Myanmar Witness showed the impact sights and large blood puddles, footwear, and clothing in the pagoda courtyard.

    “The incidents in Moe Bye come at a time when we are seeing a dramatic rise in the use of deliberately set fires and airstrikes, which are becoming a part of daily life in Myanmar,” Anlezark said. 

    “Two years after the military coup that overthrew democracy in villages and towns around the country, Myanmar Witness is regularly observing and investigating evidence of incidents and abuses of the type documented in this report,” he added.

  • Myanmar’s military announces fresh, strict elections ahead of country’s elections

    Myanmar’s military announces fresh, strict elections ahead of country’s elections

    New regulations that have been announced in state media seem to be intended to prevent any significant opposition to the military.

    The strict new law on political parties that Myanmar’s military, which took control in a coup almost two years ago, has announced is likely to cause more concerns about the integrity of the elections that are scheduled for August.

    The law, which repeals legislation from 2010, prohibits parties and candidates from supporting people or groups that have been “designated as committing terror acts” or are otherwise deemed to be “unlawful.”

    Parties that want to contest the national election will also need to secure at least 100,000 members within three months of registration and have funds of 100 million Myanmar kyat ($45,500), 100 times more than previously. The money has to be deposited with the state-owned Myanma Economic Bank.

    The law, signed by coup leader Min Aung Hlaing, was published in the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar on Friday.

    The military detained elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and seized power on February 1, 2021, in the wake of an election that returned her National League for Democracy to office in a landslide.

    The generals claimed without evidence that there was fraud in the poll. International monitors who observed the November 2020 election found it to be largely free and fair.

    Aung San Suu Kyi, who remains hugely popular, has been jailed for more than 30 years following secretive trials on charges from illegally owning walkie-talkies to corruption that critics say are designed to remove her from the country’s political life. Other senior members of her party, including removed President Win Myint, have also been tried and jailed.

    Amid widespread international criticism of the coup and sanctions from the United States and other countries, the military initially announced it would hold new elections within a year. It then backtracked to say they would be held between February and August 2023.

    The new law states any existing party must apply for registration within two months of the legislation being announced or be “automatically invalidated”. Parties can also be suspended for three years, and ultimately dissolved, for failing to comply with the provisions of the new law.

    The legislation also says parties are not allowed to lodge an appeal against election commission decisions on registration.

    The coup plunged Myanmar into a political crisis as the military’s brutal crackdown on anti-coup protests led civilians to take up arms and join forces with ethnic armed groups in the country’s border regions.

    Nearly 3,000 people have been killed by the military since it seized power, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a civil society group monitoring the crackdown.

    Thousands more have been detained with groups fighting against the military designated as “terrorists”.

  • Myanmar crisis: 50 people killed in an air raid on Kachin insurgents, reports say

    According to accounts, an air raid targeting one of Myanmar’s largest ethnic insurgent groups killed at least 50 people and injured about 100 more.

    Colonel Naw Bu, a spokesman for the Kachin Independence Army, provided the death toll to the BBC (KIA).

    Witnesses in Kachin State, northern Myanmar, say three bombs were dropped on a KIA performance in Kansi village.

    Villagers said there was no warning before the raid.

    The concert in Kansi was to mark the 62nd anniversary of the rebel army’s campaign for autonomy.

    Witnesses reported three huge explosions at around 20:30 (14:00 GMT) local time on Sunday. They ripped apart the cluster of buildings at the base and caused heavy casualties in the audience.

    Among those killed are believed to be four popular Kachin singers. Eyewitnesses say the military blocked medics trying to move the injured to the nearby town of Hpakant, which has a hospital.

    This part of Kachin State has been fiercely contested for many years by the military and Kachin insurgents because of its jade mines, which are thought to be worth around $30bn (£27bn) a year.

    There has been frequent fighting there before and after the military coup last year, which deposed the civilian government led by Aung San Suu Kyi.

    This attack may be retribution, or a warning, from the military, over the support the Kachin insurgents have been giving to other armed groups in Myanmar formed to resist the coup.

     

  • Aung San Suu Kyi’s prison sentence increased to 26 years after latest fraud sentencing

    The 77-year-old Nobel laureate, who played a leading role in the movement against military rule, is accused of at least 18 crimes, ranging from bribery to election fraud, with potential sentences totaling about 190 years if convicted.

    A court convicted former Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi guilty of taking part in election fraud, and she was given a three-year prison extension.

    The sentencing adds to previous convictions that now leave her with a 26-year total prison term, a legal official has said.

    The 77-year-old Nobel laureate, a figurehead of opposition to military rule, faces charges for at least 18 offences ranging from graft to election violations, carrying combined maximum terms of nearly 190 years.

    Demonstrators hold placards with pictures of Suu Kyi as they protest against the military coup in Yangon
    Image:Demonstrators hold placards with pictures of Suu Kyi as they protest against the military coup in Yangon

    Graft is defined as the act of taking advantage of your political position or government job by taking money or property in dishonest or fraudulent ways.

    Suu Kyi has called the accusations against her absurd and denied any wrongdoing.

    She is being held in solitary confinement in the capital, Naypyitaw, and her trials have been conducted in closed courts.

    The latest charges were related to allegations Suu Kyi accepted bribes from a businessman, said the source, who
    declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the issue.

    Suu Kyi received three-year jail sentences on two charges, to be served concurrently.

    Opponents of the military say the charges against Suu Kyi are aimed at blocking her from ever getting involved in politics
    again or trying to challenge the military’s grip on power since last year’s coup.

    The sentence also imperils the survival of Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party following the government’s explicit threats to dissolve it before a new election the military has promised will take place in 2023.

     

  • Rebels shot at passenger plane, Myanmar’s military accuses

    A domestic flight from the capital, Naypyidaw, to Kayah state was hit by bullets at a height of about 1,000 metres (3,280 feet).

    Myanmar’s military government has promised to take “serious action” against rebel forces that it has blamed for an attack on a passenger plane that left one person hospitalized and damaged the aircraft’s fuselage.

    A passenger on the Myanmar National Airlines domestic flight sustained facial injuries on Friday when bullets passed through the aircraft’s cabin as it prepared to land at Loikaw, the capital of eastern Kayah state, at 8:45 am local time (02:15 GMT). The flight had 63 passengers on board.

    “Although the plane was damaged … it landed successfully at Loikaw airport due to the efforts of crews,” government spokesman Major-General Zaw Min Tun was quoted on Saturday by the State-run Global New Light of Myanmar news outlet.

    The injured passenger had received treatment in hospital, said Zaw Min Tun, who described the attack on the civilian aircraft and passengers as “a military crime, a criminal act”.

    “What I want to say is that the security forces will take serious action against the perpetrators or groups that launch such brutal attacks,” he said, according to the news outlet.

    The plane, flying from the capital Naypyidaw, came under fire at a height of about 1,000 metres (3,280 feet) and about 6km (3.7 miles) north of Loikaw airport, the military government said, blaming fighters from the Karenni National Progressive Party, an ethnic rebel army, for the shooting.

    State media released photos it said were of the bullet-damaged plane and the passenger being treated. Myanmar National Airlines’ office in Loikaw announced that all flights to the city were canceled indefinitely.

    Kayah state has experienced intense conflict between the Myanmar military and local resistance groups since the army seized power last year, overthrowing the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi.

    February 1, 2021, military takeover was met with peaceful nationwide protests, but after the army and police killed demonstrators opposing military rule, civilians throughout the country formed armed units as part of a People’s Defence Force (PDF) to fight the military rule.

    Thousands have been killed in the fighting and many more jailed by the military.