Myanmar targets family of whistleblower officer in reprisal
https://parstoday.ir/en/news/world-i82548-myanmar_targets_family_of_whistleblower_officer_in_reprisal
Authorities in Myanmar have evicted from police housing the family of a policeman who has testified at court how police set up two Reuters journalists who had been covering state-sponsored violence against minority Rohingya Muslims, family members say.
(last modified 2021-04-13T02:52:40+00:00 )
Apr 22, 2018 08:00 UTC
  • Myanmar targets family of whistleblower officer in reprisal

Authorities in Myanmar have evicted from police housing the family of a policeman who has testified at court how police set up two Reuters journalists who had been covering state-sponsored violence against minority Rohingya Muslims, family members say.

Police Captain Moe Yan Naing on Friday testified that Reuters reporters Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, had been set up by police officials, who wanted them incriminated over their coverage of a massacre of Rohingya Muslims.

On Saturday, Captain Moe’s family was evicted from police housing in the capital, Naypyidaw, in what appears to be retribution for the officer’s testimony.

“I got a phone call at 7 a.m. A police second lieutenant who I’m familiar with said, ‘Sister, you need to move out from the quarters,’” Moe Yan Naing’s unemployed wife, Tu Tu, 42, told local media group the Irrawaddy.

“He said, ‘You need to move out immediately.’ I said ‘is that so?’ and I become speechless. I didn’t know what to say,” she said in a video clip carried on the Irrawaddy’s Facebook page. “We are staff family. We don’t have a house yet. Where am I supposed to move with all these items?”

Tu, her two daughters, and one son, have now taken temporary shelter at the house of the policeman’s brother.

In his court testimony, Moe gave details of how the police had arranged a “setup to entrap” the reporters who were covering the summary executions of 10 Rohingya men by government soldiers in Inn Dinn Village in western Myanmar on September 2, 2017.

The journalists themselves had said in a news conference late last year that police had framed them by giving them “two rolled papers” at a restaurant and immediately arresting them afterwards. The papers were top-secret government documents.

SS