Home FOREIGN Myanmar Reuters journalists’ verdict delayed by judge’s health

Myanmar Reuters journalists’ verdict delayed by judge’s health

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Myanmar Reuters journalists’ verdict delayed by judge’s health

 

A court in Myanmar has delayed its ruling on two Reuters journalists accused of violating a state secrets act while investigating violence against Rohingyas.

An official said the verdict would now be given on September 3, owing to the judge’s poor health.

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Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo were arrested last year while carrying official documents given to them by police.

The men, who deny all charges, face up to 14 years in jail if found guilty.

Both men have been in jail since December.

“Whatever they decide for us, we will not be afraid,” Wa Lone said while leaving the courthouse, AFP reported.

He has previously said their work followed all media ethics and that they “tried to tell the truth based on the real situation.”

The verdict comes a year after the long-running crisis in Rakhine state came to a head when a previously unknown Rohingya militant group staged deadly attacks on police posts.

The military responded with a large-scale deadly operation against the Rohingya, which the UN has said was intended to drive them out of the country for good.

Media access to Rakhine is strictly controlled by the government so it is difficult to get reliable news from the region.

Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, had been collecting evidence about the execution of 10 men in the village of Inn Din in northern Rakhine on September 2.

According to Reuters, a group of Rohingya men seeking safety on a beach were singled out and killed – at least two were hacked to death by Buddhist villagers with the rest shot by the army.

On December 12, the journalists were invited to dinner with two police officers who handed them documents about the massacre.

They were arrested when they left the restaurant.

They were charged with “possessing important and secret government documents related to Rakhine state and security forces”.

Police said the information had been “illegally acquired with the intention to share it with foreign media.”

Their lawyers say they were set up by police because officials wanted them to be punished for exposing the massacre.

“We are not wrong and the things alleged by the prosecution are baseless,” Wa Lone said in court last week.

One police officer has testified for the defence, saying he was ordered to plant the documents on them.

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