Arrested Myanmar reporters: Two book
lovers dedicated to the truth
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[December 19, 2017]
By Antoni Slodkowski, Shoon Naing and Thu Thu Aung
YANGON/BANGKOK (Reuters) - In many ways Wa
Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, two Reuters journalists arrested in Myanmar,
symbolize their country's emergence after decades of isolation - both
from modest, provincial backgrounds, they worked hard to pursue careers
that would have been impossible in the junta era into which they were
born.
Following are profiles of the two journalists, who were arrested on Dec.
12 and have been held since then without contact with their families or
a lawyer, accused of breaching the country's Official Secrets Act:
WA LONE
Wa Lone, 31, grew up in Kin Pyit, a village of some 100 households in
the Shwe Bo district north of Mandalay, on Myanmar's dry central plain
between the mighty Irrawaddy and Chindwin rivers.
One of five children, his parents were rice farmers and there was little
money. His mother died from cancer when he was young.
But he was a good student, according to friends and family, and took a
keen interest in news from an early age. One of his brothers, Thura
Aung, remembers Wa Lone, aged around 10, watching bulletins on a shared
TV in their village.
"Sometimes he would play at being an anchor," said Thura Aung, 26. "He
always said he wanted to be a reporter in the future."
After finishing school at 16 he enrolled as a student at a government
technical university, but left after a couple of semesters because his
family could not afford the tuition.
Around 2004 he went to Mawlamyine, Myanmar's fourth biggest city, living
in a Buddhist monastery where his uncle was a monk. In exchange for a
place to stay, he would get up at 5 a.m. to clean and prepare food for
the monks before going to work at a photo services business. Wa Lone
showed a talent for design and photography, and soon set up a small
photo services shop of his own, which he ran with Thura Aung.
In December 2010, having saved a little money, the brothers moved back
to Yangon, where Wa Lone could pursue his boyhood dream. Living in North
Okklapa township, near the city's airport, they re-established their
photo services business, while Wa Lone also enrolled in a media training
school and later began taking English classes.
Mindy Walker, an American teacher who met him in 2012, recalls a "skinny
kid from the village who had little interaction with foreigners".
He was so nervous he fled her English class the first time he was called
on to answer a question.
"We still joke about that moment and he tells every new student in our
class that story so that they feel more confident," said Walker in an
email. "His heart is huge and he is always encouraging others to
succeed."
CHARITABLE FOUNDATION
Within five or six months Wa Lone had landed his first job in journalism
on the weekly People's Age in Yangon, where his editor was Pe Myint -
now Myanmar's Minister of Information.
In 2014, he joined the English-language daily, Myanmar Times, covering
the historic 2015 general election that swept Nobel peace prize laureate
Aung San Suu Kyi to power.
"As soon as I met Wa Lone, I knew we had to hire him," said the paper's
former editor, Thomas Kean. "He was thoughtful, articulate and clearly
cared deeply about journalism."
As well as providing a platform for him to excel as a journalist, the
two years he spent at the Myanmar Times was a significant period in Wa
Lone's life - it was there that he met his wife Pan Ei Mon who works in
the paper's sales and marketing department. The couple married in April
last year.
Despite the long hours chasing stories and studying, Wa Lone has still
found time to write a children's book, The Gardener, a story in Burmese
and English with an environmental message that draws on his own rural
roots.
He co-founded the Third Story Project, a charitable foundation that
produces and distributes stories that aim to promote tolerance between
Myanmar's different ethnic groups, and is involved in projects working
with orphans.
Many of his weekends off have been spent visiting poor rural villages -
much like the one where he grew up.
"He brings story books from Third Story and gives them to children,"
said Pan Ei Mon. "He reads to them and does painting competitions and
sings with the children."
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Reuters journalist Wa Lone, who was arrested in Myanmar, is seen at
Reuters office in Yangon, Myanmar March 14, 2017. REUTERS/Antoni
Slodkowski
Wa Lone joined Reuters in July 2016 and quickly made his mark with
in-depth stories on sensitive subjects including land grabs by the
powerful military and the murder of prominent politician Ko Ni, as
well as uncovering evidence of killings by soldiers in the
northeast.
His reporting on the crisis that erupted in northwestern Rakhine
state in October 2016 won him a joint honorable mention from the
Society of Publishers in Asia in its annual awards.
He returned to Rakhine this year, after attacks by Rohingya Muslim
militants on security forces in August triggered a crackdown by the
army.
Covering such subjects is not easy in a country where the transition
from decades of junta rule is proving painful.
"His bravery over the past year, and particularly since Aug. 25, has
been incredible. It's hard to describe the tide of ill-feeling
towards journalists who question the military-government narrative
on Rakhine," said Kean, his former editor.
"As soon as one of my colleagues said, 'Have you heard about Wa
Lone?', I knew he'd been arrested. His reporting has undoubtedly
made him a target. It's heartbreaking, infuriating and completely
unsurprising."
KYAW SOE OO
Family and friends of Kyaw Soe Oo say he has always had a love of
writing, and composed poetry before becoming a journalist.
Min Min, the founder of the Root Investigative Agency, where Kyaw
Soe Oo worked after starting his reporting career with the online
Rakhine Development News, described the 27-year-old as "a joyful
person" who had many friends.
"When I first met him in 2013, he was a poet not a journalist and
not interested in journalism yet," said Min Min.
An ethnic Rakhine Buddhist, Kyaw Soe Oe grew up in the state capital
Sittwe, and was one of five siblings.
"He is a good elder brother," said his sister, Nyo Nyo Aye, adding
that her brother always stood out from the crowd.
"He was always with books. He went to the book store or second-hand
booksellers. He spent all his money buying books. ."
Childhood friend Zaw Myo Thu said he avoided becoming caught up in
the communal tensions between Rakhine Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims
that have seethed in the city since the upheavals in 2012.
"He wrote poems. He loved to read," he said. "He never fought with
anyone."
But it was that conflict which drew him into journalism, covering
Rakhine issues. He had been with Reuters since September, reporting
on the army's crackdown in the aftermath of militant attacks on
security forces on Aug. 25.
"As a journalist, he will cover news, but I think he will do it
fairly because he does not discriminate between races," said his
sister Nyo Nyo Aye. "He just realizes all are human."
For Reuters, Kyaw Soe Oo worked on an investigative story about
Myanmar's plan to harvest the crops of Rohingya farmers who fled to
Bangladesh, and reported on how some Buddhists were enforcing
local-level segregation in central Rakhine.
"He didn't tell me about the work and I never asked," said his wife,
Chit Thu Win, with whom he has a three-year-old daughter. "I
believed in him that he is doing the right thing and he's just
following his passion. He wanted to be a writer."
(Reporting by Thuy Thuy Aung, Shoon Naing, Antoni Slodkowski, Simon
Lewis, Andrew R.C. Marshall and Yimou Lee; Writing by Alex
Richardson; Edited by Martin Howell)
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