Hkalam Samson also thanked the US for sanctioning top generals during a visit to the Oval Office last month.
A prominent Christian leader from Kachin state could be arrested for criticising the Myanmar military during a televised meeting with US President Donald Trump.
Reverend Hkalam Samson met with Trump and other senior US officials at the White House on July 17 as part of a State Department initiative to promote religious freedom.
“As Christians in Myanmar, we are… being oppressed and tortured by the Myanmar military government,” the reverend told Trump during the meeting at the Oval Office.
He added that he was grateful for a recent US decision to sanction top military officials.
In response, Lieutenant Colonel Than Htike filed a complaint at a court in Kachin State capital Myitkyina on Monday. The court will decide by September 9 whether to proceed with the case.
It is not yet known which law the reverend would be charged under if the case goes ahead, but the military has routinely used anti-defamation laws that carry prison sentences to silence its critics.
Hkalam Samson is president of the Kachin Baptist Convention (KBC), an evangelical group known for its work promoting human rights in the war-torn state.
The reverend told Myanmar Now authorities have not informed him about the legal complaint against him.
He appreciated, however, that the military had complained through legal channels and done so transparently, he said.
His comments to Trump were made without malice, he added: “I spoke with good intentions not only for ethnic people but also so all Myanmar people can enjoy justice and freedom.”
Trump spoke with 27 victims of religious persecution from 17 countries including China, Turkey, North Korea and Iran during the July meeting.
At the meeting, the reverend called on the US government to focus on helping ethnic people in Myanmar to achieve genuine democracy and federalism.
And he said a State Department decision announced the day before to ban Senior General Min Aung Hlaing and three other top military officials from entering the US was “helpful”.
The sanctions were a response to reports of military-led mass killings of Rohingya in 2017. But the move has been criticised by rights activists who say it does not go far enough and will have little impact on the generals.
Myanmar Now was unable to reach a military spokesperson for comment.

Police Major Myat Moe from Myitkyina Township told Myanmar Now that he was unaware of the complaint as the military filed it directly to the court.
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