Myanmar defends executions as 'justice for the people' as condemnation
grows
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[July 26, 2022]
(Reuters) -Myanmar's ruling
military on Tuesday defended its execution of four democracy activists
as "justice for the people", brushing off a deluge of international
condemnation including from its closest neighbours.
The military, which seized power in a coup last year, announced on
Monday it had executed the activists for aiding "terror acts" by a
civilian resistance movement, Myanmar's first executions in decades.
Junta spokesperson Zaw Min Tun said the men were given due process and
insisted those executed were not democracy activists, but killers
deserving of their punishment.
"This was justice for the people. These criminals were given the chance
to defend themselves," he told a regular televised news briefing.
"I knew it would raise criticism but it was done for justice. It was not
personal."
News of the executions triggered international outrage, with the United
States, Britain, Australia, the European Union and United Nations
leading a chorus of condemnation accusing the junta of cruelty.
Myanmar's Southeast Asian neighbours issued a rare, stinging rebuke of
the military on Tuesday, calling the executions "highly reprehensible"
and destructive to regional efforts to de-escalate the crisis.
The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in a
statement from chair Cambodia said it was "extremely troubled and deeply
saddened by the executions", as well as by their timing.
"The implementation of the death sentences just a week before the 55th
ASEAN ministerial meeting is highly reprehensible," it said, adding it
showed the junta's "gross lack of will" to support ASEAN's U.N.-backed
peace plan.
It was unclear how the executions were carried our and when they took
place. Family members of the condemned prisoners said on Monday that
they had not been informed of the executions beforehand, and had not
been allowed to retrieve the bodies.
Junta spokesperson Zaw Min Tun said the return of the bodies was up to
the prison chief.
'CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY'
The executed men were among more than 100 people whom activists say have
been sentenced to death in secretive trials by military-run courts since
the coup.
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A combination image shows Kyaw Min Yu, also known as Ko Jimmy and
Phyo Zeyar Thaw, two of the four democracy activists executed by
Myanmar's military authorities, accused of helping carry out "terror
acts," state media, in the undated screen grabs taken from a handout
video. MRTV/Handout via REUTERS
Malaysia's Foreign Minister Saifuddin Abdullah said on Tuesday that
his country viewed the executions as a crime against humanity.
He also accused the junta of making a mockery of the ASEAN peace
plan and said it should be barred from sending political
representatives to any international ministerial level meetings.
"We hope we have seen the last of the executions," he said. "We will
try to use whatever channels that we can to ensure this will not
happen again."
U.N. Special Rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews,
said he was concerned the executions of junta opponents would not be
a one-off.
"There is every indication that the military junta intends to
continue to carry out executions of those on death row, as it
continues to bomb villages and detain innocent people throughout the
country," he said in an interview on Monday.
In Myanmar's biggest city Yangon, security was tightened at the jail
where the four executed men had been held, a human rights group said
on Tuesday, following the global outcry and a demonstration by
inmates over the execution.
Two sources told Reuters a protest had taken place in the jail. News
portal Myanmar Now said some inmates had been assaulted by prison
authorities and were separated from the general population.
Spokespersons for Yangon's Insein prison and the corrections
department did not answer calls from Reuters.
Myanmar's shadow national Unity Government (NUG), which the junta
calls "terrorists", urged coordinated international action against
the junta on Tuesday and said those executed "were martyred for
their commitment to a free and democratic Myanmar"
(Reporting by Reuters Staff; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Ed
Davies)
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