Since 11 February, security forces have detained at least six journalists in Myanmar as protests continue against the military government.
This statement was originally published on cpj.org on 16 February 2021.
“Myanmar’s feared media clampdown is coming to harsh fruition with rising threats to journalists,” said Shawn Crispin, CPJ’s senior Southeast Asia representative. “Junta authorities should cease and desist harassing, detaining, and threatening the media, and let journalists do their jobs without fear of reprisal.”
On February 11, police and military officers arrested freelance journalist Shwe Yee Win in the town of Pathein, Reuters and the news website TimeAyeyar reported. CPJ could not determine if she has been released as of today.
On February 14, security forces in Myitkyina, in northern Kachin State, detained Mizzima News news website reporter Sai Latt Aung, Eternity Peace News Network reporters Ko Wai Yan and Ko Yan Kaung, and 74 Media broadcaster editor-in-chief Htoi Awng and camera operator Naw Seng while they were covering an anti-coup protest, according to 74 Media and The Irrawaddy.
The five were released yesterday morning after signing documents saying they would not violate an emergency rule banning gatherings of more than five people and a nighttime curfew, according to The Irrawaddy.
Separately, the Ministry of Information issued a statement to the Myanmar Press Council, an independent media adjudication body, on February 12 alleging that some media outlets were using “incorrect words” in their news reports, including referring to the military’s takeover as a “coup” and its installed government as a “junta,” according to a report by Bloomberg.
The letter said inaccurate usage could be deemed as “acts of instigation that may arouse civil unrest” and may violate publishing laws, that report said.
The military government has also proposed a law that would require local internet service providers to disclose user information to authorities, and to remove content deemed to “cause hatred, destroy unity and tranquility” or be “untruthful news or rumors,” Reuters reported.
Anyone who posts “misinformation or disinformation” could face up to three years in prison if they are deemed to have done so “with the intent of causing public panic, loss of trust or social division,” reports said.
The bill was sent to telecommunications operators and internet service providers on February 9, and they were asked to submit their comments by February 14; the Myanmar Times reported that 158 local groups said in a statement they did not accept the bill as legitimate, as it was not issued by a legitimate democratic institution.
The military government has sporadically suspended access to social media platforms such as Facebook, WhatsApp, and Twitter since staging a February 1 takeover of power, as CPJ has documented. The coup government has also sporadically shut down the internet, including yesterday, while the regime deployed troops to suppress protests in cities and towns, reports said.
CPJ emailed Myanmar’s Home Ministry for comment, but did not receive any reply.