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		Myanmar policeman who said Reuters 
		reporters were framed details sting operation 
		
		 
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		 [May 10, 2018] 
		By Shoon Naing and Thu Thu Aung 
		 
		YANGON (Reuters) - A Myanmar policeman now 
		serving a prison sentence gave more details to a court on Wednesday 
		about how he says two Reuters reporters were framed by police, in what 
		has become a landmark press freedom case for the Southeast Asian nation. 
		 
		Police captain Moe Yan Naing, 47, who since his original testimony on 
		April 20 has been sentenced to a year in jail for violating police 
		discipline, gave a blow-by-blow account of how he says a police chief 
		ordered subordinates to give "secret" documents to Reuters reporter Wa 
		Lone in a sting operation. 
		 
		"I gave the testimony as I know and as I saw," Moe Yan Naing told 
		reporters after the hearing. He said he did not regret giving his 
		testimony. 
		 
		Lead prosecutor Kyaw Min Aung did not respond to a request for comment 
		after the hearing. 
		 
		Follow latest updates on detained reporters 
		https://www.reuters.com/subjects/myanmar-reporters 
		
		
		  
		
		Myanmar government spokesman Zaw Htay said: "It will be carried out 
		according to the law. The court is free, impartial, independent and 
		reliable. We guarantee that the defendants will have their own rights, 
		which means choosing their own lawyers etc." 
		 
		The court in Yangon has been holding hearings since January to decide 
		whether Wa Lone 32, and his Reuters colleague Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, will be 
		charged under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act, which carries a 
		maximum penalty of 14 years in prison. 
		 
		At the time of their arrest in December, the reporters had been working 
		on an investigation into the killing of 10 Rohingya Muslim men and boys 
		in a village in western Myanmar's Rakhine state. The killings took place 
		during an army crackdown that United Nations agencies say sent nearly 
		700,000 people fleeing to Bangladesh. 
		 
		DOCUMENT TRAP 
		 
		In an account that closely followed his original testimony, but went 
		into greater detail, Moe Yan Naing said that on Dec. 12 - hours before 
		the reporters were arrested - he was among six officers who had 
		previously been contacted by Wa Lone who were interrogated by the Police 
		Special Branch. 
		 
		The internal investigation was led Police Brigadier General Tin Ko Ko, 
		according to Moe Yan Naing. 
		 
		When Tin Ko Ko found out that one of the six, Lance Corporal Naing Lin, 
		had been in contact with Wa Lone but had not met him in person, he 
		ordered Naing Lin to use his phone to arrange a meeting with Wa Lone 
		that evening. 
		 
		"I know that Police Brigadier General Tin Ko Ko instructed Police Lance 
		Corporal Naing Lin to give Wa Lone documents related to our frontline 
		activities in order to have him arrested," Moe Yan Naing told Judge Ye 
		Lwin, overseeing the proceedings. 
		 
		Moe Yan Naing said Tin Ko Ko told the policemen involved that if they 
		did not "get Wa Lone" they would be detained. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
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			Detained Reuters journalist Kyaw Soe Oo is escorted by police while 
			leaving after a court hearing in Yangon, Myanmar May 9, 2018. 
			REUTERS/Stringer 
            
  
            Reuters has been unable to contact Tin Ko Ko or Naing Lin for 
			comment. A police spokesman said after Moe Yan Naing's previous 
			testimony that the brigadier general "has no reason to do such a 
			thing". 
			 
			FAMILY EVICTED 
			 
			Prosecutors had originally called Moe Yan Naing as a witness, but 
			asked the court to declare him unreliable after his to testimony 
			appeared to undermine their case. The judge rejected that 
			application last week. 
			 
			Moe Yan Naing was brought to court in shackles and wearing a dark 
			blue prison uniform, in contrast to his first appearance last month 
			when he had worn his police captain's uniform and was not 
			handcuffed. 
			 
			He said he had been convicted and sentenced in his absence and still 
			did not know which court had handed down the punishment. 
			 
			Moe Yan Naing has said he spoke to Wa Lone in late November about 
			police operations in Rakhine. He said Wa Lone introduced himself as 
			a reporter and interviewed Moe Yan Naing at a teashop inside the 
			headquarters of the 8th Police Security Battalion. 
			 
			Moe Yan Naing's 42-year-old wife, Tu Tu, listened to proceedings 
			from the side of the courtroom. Together with their three children, 
			she was evicted from police housing in the capital Naypyitaw the day 
			following Moe Yan Naing's first testimony. The family have since 
			moved in with Moe Yan Naing's father in his native town of Khin U, 
			in central Myanmar. 
			 
			Police have said the eviction was unrelated to the reporters' case, 
			but that the family had been overdue to move out of their apartment. 
            
			  
			Wa Lone told journalists after the hearing that Moe Yan Naing 
			"bravely proved that in our society, there are people who adore the 
			truth and justice". 
			 
			(Reporting Shoon Naing and Thu Thu Aung; Additional reporting by 
			Yimou Lee; Editing by Alex Richardson) 
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