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Young, underground reporters ‘fight a gun with a pen’ in Myanmar

Journalists covering a protest near Yangon, Myanmar on Feb. 18, 2021. Myanmar is now one of the world’s most dangerous places for journalists after the army seized power in a coup last year. (The New York Times)

The 15-year-old reporter deleted the data from her phone and packed up her guitar as she set out to meet a guerrilla fighter in Myanmar. The instrument was mostly a decoy, there to disguise her work as a journalist. She cleared the data from her phone to protect her sources in the event of an arrest.

Greeting the fighter, she took out the guitar and strummed an old Burmese tune, “The Sound of the Crane”.

When she felt safe, she started her interview, quickly stashing the recording in a hidden folder on her phone after she was done. “Every time I go out to report, I always think that I might get arrested,” said Khaung, who works for the Burmese literary magazine Oway. Like the other journalists in Myanmar interviewed for this article, Khaung agreed to be interviewed only if her pen name was used, fearing repercussions from the military government.

Myanmar is now one of the world’s most dangerous places for journalists. For the first time, it is on track to be the top jailer of reporters, surpassing China this year. Fifty-seven reporters are in prison there, according to the Detained Myanmar Journalists Group, an advocacy organisation. At least 51 journalists are imprisoned in China, according to tallies from various rights groups.

Just two weeks after the military seized power in a coup last year, the junta in Myanmar created a new provision in its penal code called Section 505A, making it a crime to publish comments that “cause fear” or spread “false news”. Some of the country’s best known investigative outlets — including Myanmar Now, DVB, Khit Thit, 7 Days and Mizzima — have since had their licences revoked. Hundreds of journalists have fled. The reporters at Oway are now among the last remnants of a free press.

“It is not easy to fight a gun with a pen, but I need to keep doing it,” said Aung Sett, the publication’s 22-year-old editor-in-chief, who spoke on the condition that his pen name be used.

Aung Sett, a third-year political science student at the University of Yangon, has been in hiding ever since the army issued a Section 505 arrest warrant against him. One of his partners, who was in charge of printing Oway, was shot and killed by soldiers while protesting the coup.

More than 140 journalists have been arrested since the military took power, mostly on charges related to Section 505A. Independent journalists can no longer safely take out a camera or a notebook. Three reporters have been killed by soldiers, including one photojournalist who had covered a silent protest in the city of Yangon last December and was tortured to death while in custody.

Last month, the junta sentenced Htet Htet Khine, a freelance television presenter who worked for the BBC, to six years in prison with hard labour, saying her reporting amounted to “incitement and illegal association”. And the crackdown has not been limited to domestic reporters.

A military tribunal sentenced Japanese documentary filmmaker Toru Kubota, 26, to 10 years in prison last week. On Wednesday, Kubota was sentenced to an additional three years in prison on charges of violating immigration laws. Danny Fenster, an American journalist who contributed to Myanmar Now, was sentenced to 11 years in prison before being released three days later after Bill Richardson, a former US diplomat, helped secure his freedom.

“The junta regime has effectively outlawed independent journalism in the country,” said Shawn Crispin, the senior Southeast Asia representative for the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Journalists on a motorbike head toward to the site of protest crackdowns on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar on March 14, 2021. (The New York Times)

The media in Myanmar did once enjoy a semblance of independence. Thein Sein, Myanmar’s former president, scrapped censorship laws in 2011 as part of a broad program to open up the country and move it toward democracy. Creative expression flourished. Dozens of newspapers opened.

While journalists working under previous military regimes who were critical of the government were forced to operate underground, accounts of torture were rare. That changed after the coup. In March 2021, Nathan Maung, the editor-in-chief of Kamayut Media, an online publication, and Han Thar Nyein, its co-founder, were among dozens of journalists rounded up by the junta.

In an interview with The New York Times, Maung said he was blindfolded and handcuffed for 14 days and beaten in his face and abdomen. Later, when they were in the same prison cell, Maung said, Han Thar Nyein told him that soldiers had threatened him with rape after he refused to hand over the passcode to his phone, and that he had to kneel on a block of ice for two to three hours before he relented.

After more than three months in captivity, Maung, who was born in Myanmar but is an American citizen, was suddenly released. He is now back in the United States, while Han Thar Nyein remains in prison in Myanmar.

“It’s just been devastating, considering the extraordinary progress that you had seen in the media landscape since the 2012 opening,” said Crispin. “All of that has been erased.”

Oway is a biweekly publication that specialises in reporting on youth issues and politics and does in-depth features such as profiles of striking food delivery workers and attrition within the army. Nearly all its writers are in their 20s and 30s.

The magazine was started in 1936 by the University of Yangon Students’ Union, a major proponent in the struggle against British colonial rule. One of its editors-in-chief was Aung San, who led Myanmar’s independence from Britain and is the father of Aung San Suu Kyi, who was detained in the coup last year and has been sentenced to 26 years in prison, with more trials underway.

After the coup, Khaung dropped out of school and was inspired to become a journalist after she participated in protests and was interviewed by a reporter. Like other writers who contribute to Oway, Khaung said she chose the publication because she knew the print version could still be distributed in places like the central Sagaing region, where the internet has been cut off by the regime in its effort to stop the spread of information.

“With journalism, I do believe that I can represent and can be the voice for the voiceless,” she said. “Right now, I want to write about everything I see because everything is unfair in this country.”

One of the people who taught her the basics of journalism was Mratt Kyaw Thu, who honed his skills as a freelance journalist reporting from places like Rakhine state, home of the Rohingya Muslim minority, which has been violently persecuted in Myanmar. After the coup, he secured the first interview with an army captain who had defected. The story went viral.

Mratt Kyaw Thu fled the country after neighbours alerted him that soldiers had come to his apartment looking for him. After hiding out in a border village by the Salween River, and later in a forest, he and a fellow journalist finally made it to Thailand, Germany and then Spain. In July, the military announced a reward for anyone who disclosed information on his whereabouts.

He now spends most of his time commiserating with other exiled journalists. “I’m feeling a little bit guilty because most of the time I actually want to be in a battle zone,” he said. “Right now, I can’t do much because I’m in Spain, and the only thing I can do is talk to soldiers on the ground.”

“It’s not really enough,” he said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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