Seventy-nine days in AA captivity

Three NLD candidates speak to Myanmar Now about their ordeal as prisoners of the Arakan Army

NLD candidates Ni Ni May Myint, Min Aung, and Chit Chit Chaw were campaigning in Rakhine state when they were kidnapped by the AA on October 14, 2020. 

Three political candidates were talking to members of their party’s campaign team in a house in Phaungka, a village in southern Rakhine state’s Taungup township, when a group of armed men suddenly burst into the room.

The three candidates were members of the ruling National League for Democracy (NLD), and the dozen or so men who stormed in on them were from the Arakan Army (AA), an ethnic armed group engaged in an ongoing conflict with Myanmar’s military. 

This dramatic scene unfolded on October 14, just three and a half weeks before the November 8 election that the NLD would go on to win by a landslide.

The candidates were running for seats in the state parliament and the upper and lower houses of the Union parliament: Min Aung, the only man in the group, was a sitting MP in the state parliament, while Chit Chit Chaw and Ni Ni May Myint were running for the Amyotha Hluttaw and Pyithu Hluttaw, respectively.

 

 

All three spoke to Myanmar Now recently about their 79-day ordeal, which ended on January 1, long after the election date had come and gone.

Pandemonium in Phaungka

 

 

The village of Phaungka is on an island of the same name, located about 15 miles west of Taungup township in southern Rakhine. Like other townships in this part of the state, Taungup is an NLD stronghold.

Ni Ni May Myint, the 32-year-old incumbent candidate for the lower house seat, recalled the moment a normal day on the campaign trail turned into sheer mayhem.

“We were all just sitting at the dining table when they came in with their weapons. They told us not to move. My first thought was that it had to be some kind of joke. It happened so suddenly, I didn’t have a chance to think about what was actually happening,” she said.

That air of unreality soon passed, however, when one of the armed men slapped Min Aung on the face and the whole place erupted with shouts and curses.

“There was a small sleeping area for us two women. We were held separately there under constant watch from security guards. They followed us wherever we went,” said Ni Ni May Myint, one of the three captives

Once the turmoil settled down, the armed men demanded that the three candidates identify themselves and then hand over their phones and other belongings. They then marched their captives out onto the beach and blindfolded them as they boarded two waiting boats.

For the next few hours, they travelled in darkness until they reached a village at around 8pm. They spent the night there, and then resumed their journey by motorboat the next day. 

After another full day of travel and another night in an unknown village, a car came to pick them up the following morning. They drove until they reached the end of the road, and then they had to start walking.

Two days later, after sleeping rough in the jungle along the way, they arrived at the camp where they would be held for the next 10 days.

“There was a small sleeping area for us two women. We were held separately there under constant watch from security guards. They followed us wherever we went,” said Ni Ni May Myint.

They were then moved again, this time to a location where they had even more basic accommodation. For the next three weeks, the two women stayed in primitive shelters consisting of little more than logs and bamboo mats, while Min Aung was held elsewhere. Then they returned to the camp where they had stayed for 10 days at the foot of a mountain.

It wasn’t the first time the AA had kidnapped someone from the NLD. At the end of 2019, they detained Ye Thein, the party’s chair in Buthidaung township. Two weeks later, he was dead—allegedly, according to the AA, because he had been shot during a clash with the Myanmar military.

As they listened to artillery shells explode not far from the camp where they were being held prisoner, the three captives began to fear that they might share Ye Thein’s fate.

Beatings and meagre meals

A few days after they seized the three NLD candidates, the AA started interrogating each of them separately. They asked them about their party activities, military issues, and personal matters, said Ni Ni May Myint.

“They just asked questions and wrote it all down. They didn’t seem to have anything specific or important that they wanted to know,” she said.

Regarding her own background, Ni Ni May Myint told them that she became interested in politics after the 2007 Saffron Revolution. The following year, she joined a demonstration on the 20th anniversary of the four-eights uprising of August 8, 1988. She was arrested for this and spent the next three years in Buthidaung prison.

“I had to answer their questions, and if they weren’t satisfied with what I said, they beat me. My back was beaten 15 times,” said Min Naing, one of the three captives  

Though she was no stranger to captivity, Ni Ni May Myint had good reason to suffer even more as a prisoner of the AA than she did as an imprisoned young activist more than a decade ago. She said her greatest concern was not for her own safety, but for her husband and four-year-old daughter in Yangon.

“They say that those who stay behind worry more than those who go away. That’s also true for those who are outside” of prison, she said. “I couldn’t stop thinking about how they must feel. As for myself, I just tried to take care of my health as best I could, and adapted as much as possible to my circumstances, despite the problems with our accommodation.”

Unlike his female colleagues, Min Aung was also subjected to beatings as part of his questioning. For two consecutive days—October 29 and 30—his captors demanded to know what role, if any, he played in the campaign against the AA during his two-year tenure as Rakhine state’s minister for municipal affairs. 

“I had to answer their questions, and if they weren’t satisfied with what I said, they beat me. My back was beaten 15 times,” the former political prisoner told Myanmar Now.

For 33-year-old Chit Chit Chaw, the greatest hardship was having barely enough to eat from one day to the next. She said their two meals a day always consisted of the same thing—a vegetable known locally as “hin hlaw”.

“After eating at 7 or 8 o’clock in the morning and then going hungry all day, you’re wondering if they will give you anything extra for dinner. But every time, it’s just a small dish of hin hlaw, the same as before,” she said.

To get through their ordeal, the captives talked about their families and shared their feelings. 

“Ni Ni talked about her daughter. I talked about my mother. We consoled each other. Sometimes it brought tears to my eyes and sometimes I got angry,” recalled Chit Chit Chaw.

Over time, even a few of their guards relaxed and became less severe in their attitude towards them.

“As time passed, they became a little friendlier towards us. We told each other political jokes and laughed together,” said Chit Chit Chaw.

“In a situation where even political candidates can be apprehended in this way, we can’t be surprised if the new generation is afraid to get involved with politics,” said Chit Chit Chaw, one of the three captives

Another way they got through their long, tedious days of confinement was by reading. Their captors provided them with enough books to keep them occupied for most of their 79 days as “guests” of the AA. 

Most were non-fiction books with political themes: Ni Ni May Myint said she read some 50 books, on everything from Mossad, the Israeli secret service agency, to Gandhi and Rakhine history.

Released at last

The first sign that they were about to be released came at around 11am on December 30, when they were told to pack up and get ready for a trek up the mountain.

The return trip was as long and tiring as the one that brought them to the camp more than two months earlier. Once again, they had to walk for two full days and spend a night in the jungle.

Finally, in the early hours of January 1, they reached a road at the foot of a mountain where a car was waiting for them. It took them to Mee Chaung Tat, a village in Myebon township, some 150 miles away from where they were captured.

After they arrived at the village, they rested at a restaurant until around 2:30pm, when an AA official handed them over to Brig-Gen Soe Tint. They were then taken to Sittwe by helicopter at around 5pm.

A few days after their release, all three were safely returned to their homes and reunited with their families.

For Ni Ni May Myint, who during her darkest moments feared she would never see her family again, it was a happy day when she could hold her daughter again. Just days earlier, when she called her husband from Sittwe, she was distressed to learn that her child didn’t recognize her voice after her long absence. 

This wasn’t the only disappointment that she felt upon returning to civilization. While she and her two colleagues were being held in a remote location against their will, their main rivals, the Arakan National Party (ANP) won all three seats that they were contesting in Taungup.

They were convinced that their own party would have won again, as they had in 2015, if they hadn’t been taken prisoner by the AA. Even under these extraordinary circumstances, the NLD lost Taungup’s seat in the Amyotha Hluttaw by a margin of just 600 votes. 

“I think it isn’t acceptable for revolutionary forces to torture innocent people in this way. I think they are going astray in the cause of the revolution,” said Monywa Aung Shin, the secretary of the NLD’s central information committee

Nonetheless, they congratulated the victorious ANP candidates and said they were sure the new MPs would make valuable contributions to the development of Taungup township. They also vowed to continue their own work with the NLD.

At the same time, they acknowledged that what had happened to them would likely have a chilling effect on political participation in the state.

“In a situation where even political candidates can be apprehended in this way, we can’t be surprised if the new generation is afraid to get involved with politics,” said Chit Chit Chaw.

A positive message

To encourage young people, and especially women, to remain interested in politics, Chit Chit Chaw wrote on her Facebook pages about the lessons she learned from her experience. 

She noted, for example, that she encountered women soldiers in the jungle, and was greatly impressed by their eagerness to improve themselves, not just through military training, but also through reading. It was very gratifying, she said, to see women soldiers holding books.

Min Aung also recalled some of his exchanges with his captors. On one occasion, he said, he had a conversation with a young soldier who spoke freely with him because there were no officers present. 

The young soldier said he was upset when he was told that the AA was negotiating a ceasefire with the Tatmadaw. He said he wasn’t happy about the prospect of an end to the fighting because a number of his comrades had died fighting for the cause of independence.

When the soldier told him that he might run away to the city to hide his shame at not succeeding in their goal of winning freedom for the Rakhine people, Min Aung told him he had nothing to be ashamed of. He was fighting for something that he believed in, he said, and even if he didn’t achieve it, the struggle still had meaning.   

But the NLD leadership was less sympathetic towards the AA when it issued a statement after the release of the three captives claiming that their detention was “politically, militarily and revolutionarily a requirement” of the Rakhine struggle. 

Monywa Aung Shin, the secretary of the NLD’s central information committee, called the remark meaningless.

“I think it isn’t acceptable for revolutionary forces to torture innocent people in this way. I think they are going astray in the cause of the revolution,” he said.

The closure of Myanmar’s last independent newspaper marks a new milestone in the country’s political descent 

Published on Mar 18, 2021
Staring March 17,  the country no longer has a single independent newspaper in publication.

Years from now, March 17, 2021, will be remembered as the day that Myanmar’s brief era of press freedom—however partial and imperfect it was—well and truly died.

As of this day, the country no longer has a single independent newspaper in publication. On Wednesday, The Standard Time (San Taw Chain) joined The Myanmar Times, The Voice, 7Day News and Eleven in suspending operations in the wake of last month’s military coup.

It was less than a decade ago that the quasi-civilian administration of former President Thein Sein began slowly lifting restrictions on Myanmar’s long-suppressed press.

As overt censorship became a thing of the past and new licenses were issued, the number of news outlets proliferated, in the surest sign of confidence in ongoing political and economic reforms.  

Now only online news media remain as the last lifeline for millions of citizens desperate for reliable sources of information amid the military-induced freefall.

With this in mind, the new regime is acting to sever this last connection as it moves to plunge the country into darkness.

“The situation for press freedom is only going to get worse as they cut off the internet,” says political analyst Sithu Aung Myint, before adding: “The country no longer has democracy or an ounce of freedom.”

Piling pressure on news media

It took 10 days for the regime’s Ministry of Information to start making Orwellian demands. On February 11, it issued new instructions to the Myanmar Press Council, “urging” news media to “practice ethics” and stop referring to the “State Administration Council” as a junta.   

Citing provisions in Myanmar’s military-drafted constitution, the junta’s arbiters of truth claimed that the regime came to power by legitimate means because a state of emergency had been duly declared.

Newspapers, journals, and websites that persisted in using language that suggested otherwise were not merely wrong, but were also violating media ethics and inciting unrest, the ministry insisted.

Eleven days later, on February22, the coup maker himself, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, warned the media that their publishing licenses would be revoked if they continued to use words that didn’t meet with his approval.

But on February 25, in a show of defiance, some 50 news outlets declared their intention to keep reporting on the situation as it unfolded, and to describe the regime and its actions as they saw fit.

The arrests begin

Two days later, the junta began targeting the most vulnerable and essential participants in the whole news-making process: reporters.

On February 27, five journalists covering the junta’s crackdowns on anti-dictatorship activities were arrested and later charged with incitement under section 505a of the Penal Code.

Myanmar Now’s multimedia reporter Kay Zon Nway was one of those arrested that day. She was doing her job of documenting the brutal assault on protesters in Yangon’s Sanchaung township when she was apprehended while fleeing the regime’s forces as they lashed out at everyone in sight. 

210302_myanmar_kay_zon_new_journalist_myanmar_now_arrested_yangon_on_27_feb_21_000_93w2j2.jpg

Police arrest Myanmar Now journalist Kay Zon Nwe covering protests in Yangon on February 27, 2021. Credit: YE AUNG THU / AFP

The four others—Aung Ye Ko from 7Days News, Ye Myo Khant from Myanmar Pressphoto Agency, Thein Zaw from AP, and Hein Pyae Zaw from ZeeKwat Media—were reporting near Hledan when they were taken into custody. 

All five are now in Yangon’s notorious Insein prison awaiting trial on charges based on the ludicrous notion that they were somehow responsible for the mayhem that they were merely there to witness, at great risk to their own lives.

Under recent amendments to section 505a, they now face up to three years in prison for the crime of sharing what they saw with their fellow citizens.

According to data compiled by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners and last updated on March 8, as many as 33 journalists have been arrested or targeted for arrest since the February 1 coup.

155930399_2092664367568616_7441378699305917845_n.jpeg

A policeman chasing a journalist holding a camera in Yangon on February 26, 2021. 

Taking action against news organizations

The regime hasn’t just put individual journalists in its sights; as its efforts to end resistance to its rule continue to escalate, it has also moved to neutralize entire new organizations.  

On March 8, the Ministry of Information announced that it had revoked the publishing licenses of Myanmar Now and four other outlets—7Day News, Mizzima, DVB and Khit Thit media.

7Days News stopped printing the following day, and a day later, Eleven announced that it would also be suspending its operations, at least until April 18.

By that time, two other well-known local publications, The Myanmar Times and The Voice, had already shut down shop for various reasons.

That left only The Standard Time, which for the past week has been the only print newspaper in the country not controlled by the regime. And now it, too, is gone.

All of this is just another chapter in Myanmar’s long and often troubled news media history.

After Myanmar gained independence in 1948, private daily newspapers flourished in the country. Published in Myanmar, English, Chinese and Hindi, these publications were part of a vibrant culture that cherished the free exchange of ideas and information.

But that came to an abrupt end in 1962, when the former dictator General Ne Win seized power and put most daily newspapers under government control. After his 1973 constitution was ratified, privately owned dailies were effectively banned.

It wasn’t until nearly 40 years later, in late 2012, that the state-owned media’s monopoly on daily news ended under the Thein Sein government.

Now this fleeting moment of relative freedom is past, and Myanmar has returned to the dark days of an uprising that was brutally crushed, ushering in an even darker era of absolute military rule.   

“I wasn’t a journalist in ‘88, but in my 12 years in this profession, this current situation is the worst. It’s not just a matter of being afraid to go out to report; now you can be arrested just for being a person in media,” one female reporter who asked to remain anonymous remarked.

As trying as these times are, however, they have more than proven the true value of press freedom as a weapon in the fight against oppression.

“Help the news media so that the local and international community know the people’s bravery, sacrifices, and the atrocities that the dictators have committed,” Sithu Aung Myint, the political analyst, wrote on social media recently. 

“Take record of incidents yourself,” he added, reminding his readers that in this age of citizen journalists, we all have a responsibility to act as witnesses.

But even with so much courage and commitment on full display, it’s difficult not to see this day as a chilling sign of things to come.

Reflecting on what the loss of Myanmar’s last news publication means for the country, Sithu Aung Myint concluded: “As a nation without newspapers, we are now in the dark ages.”

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading

Some have complied with the order but others say they are leaving the barricades up 

Published on Mar 17, 2021
The junta’s armed forces approach a protest column in Tamwe, Yangon on February 27 (Myanmar Now) 

Police and soldiers patrolled neighbourhoods in Yangon and Mandalay on Wednesday and threatened to shoot into people’s houses unless locals removed defensive roadblocks they had set up amid spiralling one-sided violence.

A video of the coup regime’s forces making the threats through a loudspeaker circulated on social media and residents from several different neighbourhoods later told Myanmar Now they had received similar threats. 

“The next time we see barricades on roads, we will turn this entire residential quarter upside down and shoot,” a voice said in the video. 

The regime’s forces came to Khaymarthi Road and Nweni Road in Yangon’s North Okkalapa township in the afternoon to demand the removal of barricades, residents there told Myanmar Now. 

“We did not remove the barricades, so they are still on the roads,” one resident said. “We only set up the barricades in our quarter. If they didn’t not shoot, we wouldn’t need barricades. But now they’re shooting, so it is more appropriate for the people to block the roads.” 

A woman living in Hlaing Tharyar township, which this week witnessed the biggest massacre so far by regime forces since the February 1 coup, said locals removed the barricades from major roads after soldiers threatened to shoot into people’s homes. 

She then saw military trucks driving around the township, she added. 

On Wednesday morning the regime’s forces detained people and forced them to clear sandbags and other barricades on major roads elsewhere in Yangon, according to social media posts by people who said they were detained.

The junta’s security forces made similar threats in South Okkalapa, Thingangyun and Tamwe townships in Yangon and Manawramman Quarter in Mandalay, residents said. 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading

Families and lawyers are still being kept in the dark about the status of court proceedings against them

Published on Mar 17, 2021
University students and young people have been playing a leading role in the nationwide protests against the military coup on Februrary 1. (Myanmar Now)

The regime has charged more than 300 students who were detained at a protest in Tamwe on March 3 after keeping their families in the dark about their status for two weeks. 

They were detained as police and soldiers used tear gas, rubber bullets and live ammunition to attack a march organised by the University of Yangon Students’ Union and the All Burma Federation of Student Unions.

At least five were injured by rubber bullets during the attack. Police initially detained 389 people but last week released 50 who are under the age of 18.

The students have been charged under section 505a of the Penal Code, which the junta recently amended to give prison sentences of up to three years for causing fear, spreading fake news or agitating against government employees.

Lawyers say they have been unable to obtain an exact list of names of those being held and that police have been evasive regarding the case. 

“The person in charge of the case was not present. We were told that he went to the court,” one of the lawyers said. “We can’t reach him via phone, so we followed him to Tamwe court, but there was no one at the court except security.” 

Parents have been informed about the charges but not the details of the court proceedings, the lawyer said. 

Because the military junta has shut down mobile internet, court proceedings have been adjourned as video conferencing is not available. In-person hearings were stopped last year in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. 

“We, the Students’ Union, do not believe in their judicial process and therefore we do not recognize these court proceedings as legitimate,” a student activist said, requesting anonymity. “The Students’ Union will continue to fight to topple the military regime.” 

Among those detained on March 3 was Wai Yan Phyo Moe, Vice President of the All Burma Federation of Student Unions.

Three members of the central executive committee of the Yangon University Students’ Union were also arrested. They are Phone Htet Naung, Aung Phone Maw, and Lay Pyay Soe Moe.

The majority of those detained are from various universities in Yangon, with 176 being students of Yangon University. A few are from universities in rural areas of Myanmar. 

Hundreds of other students have also been arrested at protests in Mandalay and Magway, on February 28 and March 7. Only 19 of them have been released.

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

Continue Reading