Myanmar actors jailed with hard labour for show poking fun at military
A court in Myanmar has sentenced
five members of a traditional theatrical troupe to a year in prison for their
gibes about the military. The members of the
Peacock Generation thangyat troupe were arrested in April for performances
during celebrations of Myanmar’s traditional new year in which they poked fun
at military representatives in parliament and military involvement in business.
The military is a powerful political force in Myanmar even though the country
has an elected government.
Thangyat combines
dance and music with verse that often has a satirical edge. The five were
convicted on Wednesday under a law prohibiting the circulation of information
that could endanger or demoralise members of the military. “This is an appalling
verdict. Punishing people for performing a piece of satire speaks volumes about
the dire state of freedom of expression in Myanmar,” said Joanne Mariner,
research director for southeast Asia for the human rights organisation Amnesty
International. “These activists are prisoners of conscience,”
she said in an emailed statement. “They have already spent six months behind
bars, just because the Myanmar authorities are too thin-skinned to tolerate the
mildest criticism.”
The offence is punishable
by up to two years in prison, and release on bail is not allowed. Seven members of the
troupe face various charges related to the case, including for “online
defamation” for livestreaming their performances. “This sentencing of
Peacock Generation means that the judiciary of the country is continuing the
military’s suppression of freedom of expression,” said Maung Saungkha of Athan,
a Myanmar-based free speech group.
In August, another
court in Yangon found a prominent filmmaker guilty of defaming the military
with his postings on Facebook and sentenced him to a year in prison for
allegedly threatening to cause members of the military to mutiny or neglect
their duties. Filmmaker Min Htin Ko Ko Gyi, who was founder of Myanmar’s Human
Dignity Film Institute and the country’s Human Rights, Human Dignity
International Film Festival, has also been jailed since April....
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/oct/31/myanmar-actors-jailed-with-hard-labour-for-show-poking-fun-at-military