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ChinaDiplomacy

Beijing seeks return of 153 loggers sentenced to life in Myanmar

Foreign ministry voices ‘grave concern’ over trial in Myanmar and demands neighbour hand back Chinese workers ‘as soon as possible’

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Campaigners say both Myanmar and China have turned a blind eye to huge smuggling networks on their shared border, transporting not only timber but weapons, jade and rice. Photo: AFP
Andrea ChenandAgencies

Beijing has criticised the long jail sentences a court in Myanmar handed to more than 150 Chinese loggers, asking its neighbour to “return those people to China as soon as possible”.

The foreign ministry had “voiced grave concern” over the trial, and asked the local authorities to “handle the case in a lawful, reasonable and justified manner”, spokesperson Lu Kang said.

A court in Kachin state near Yunnan  province on Wednesday sentenced 153 Chinese nationals to life in prison for illegal logging, said Khin Maung, the lawyer of the defendants.

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Another two minor offenders received 10-year sentences for the same offence, the lawyer said, adding that life terms were generally treated as 20 years in Myanmar’s judicial system and that the loggers had 60 days to appeal.

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The loggers were arrested in January during a raid at camps in Kachin, where rebels have been battling the country’s government on and off for decades. Chinese loggers, who mainly did business with the rebels, kept sending wood back to China despite timber exports having been banned by Myanmar’s government in 2014.

A logger from Yunnan said that in the past arrested Chinese loggers were usually released shortly after their bosses – either mainland or Myanmese businessmen – bribed the authorities.

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