Opinion Myanmar’s good news
Release of Reuters journalists from jail is reason to celebrate, at a time when more journalists are behind bars than ever before.


Reuters journalists Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo have been released from Yangon’s Insein prison, where they were incarcerated for 511 days for breaking Myanmar’s archaic Official Secrets Act while reporting on
The case against the journalists is widely regarded as trumped-up. They were arrested after being called to a meeting with government officials, and support for the conviction under the colonial-era law, ironically, had come from documents on their cellphones, which were recovered by cutting-edge Israeli technology. The irony has not been lost on critics of archaic laws which are retained on the statute books of several nations because they are useful against critics and opponents, including the press. Nicholas Bequelin, head of Amnesty International in the region, has reacted: “Until these laws are repealed, journalists and activists remain under a permanent threat of detention and arrest.” In India, apart from the Official Secrets Act, the criminalisation of defamation remains a serious issue — the Congress has promised to reduce it to a civil offence if voted to office.
While fake news is a matter of urgent concern, the issue of journalists who are penalised for reporting the truth is no less pressing. An unprecedented number of journalists are behind bars worldwide simply for doing their job, which is to question power. In its 2017 annual survey, the Committee to Protect Journalists found that 262 professionals had been incarcerated for their work, a figure that is slightly higher than the previous year’s tally, which itself was a record. Recep Tayyib Erdogan’s Turkey took the cake, with China and Egypt close behind. But journalists are also working under unprecedented pressure in democracies led by demagogues, like the US. Amidst a rapidly developing global problem, the release of the two Reuter journalists offers hope.