Myanmar religious tolerance activists face police action

 

Yangon / AFP

Myanmar police on Monday said they have begun legal action against five protesters over a weekend rally intended to promote religious tolerance.
The move came as rights groups raise concerns about efforts by the new pro-democracy government to amend draconian laws on demonstrations.
Dozens of activists and students marched through Yangon in a rare gesture of religious solidarity in the diverse nation, where rising Buddhist nationalism has stoked anti-Muslim sentiment and sporadic bouts of bloodshed in recent years.
Police said they decided to take action against five rally leaders—believed to be three women and two men of several faiths—because the campaigners had deviated from the agreed protest route.
They now face a charge that could land them in jail for up to six months under a controversial law, currently being reviewed by the new government led by political prisoner-turned-politician Aung San Suu Kyi.
“We have started legal action against five protest leaders under Section 19 of the Peaceful Assembly Act,” police Lieutenant Major Win Tin from Kyauktada township said. Suu Kyi’s party is stacked with former dissidents who served prison time for their opposition to Myanmar’s military governments during decades of repressive rule.
They are now in government following a landslide November election victory. Since taking the helm the administration has freed scores of activists and political prisoners and signalled its determination to repeal oppressive laws. But rights groups have raised the alarm over a number of provisions in a draft amendment to the Peaceful Assembly Act. They fear these will continue to penalise non-violent demonstrations, albeit with shorter jail terms.
“You don’t need these punishments in your draft. If you remove these three things then it’s pretty good and you won’t be condemning another generation of peaceful protesters for breaking a flawed law,” said David Mathieson of Human Rights Watch.

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