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Singaporean journalist Lau Hon Meng. Photo: AP

Myanmar drops extra charges against drone flying journalists

Myanmar

A Myanmar court on Thursday dropped additional charges against two foreign journalists and their local staff who were arrested in October for allegedly flying a drone over parliament.

Lau Hon Meng, a Singaporean, and Mok Choy Lin, a Malaysian, working for Turkish state broadcaster TRT will be freed from detention together with their local interpreter Aung Naing Soe and driver Hla Tin on January 5, after serving a two-month prison sentence for illegally flying a drone, their lawyer said.

Malaysian journalist Mok Choy Lin. Photo: EPA

Khin Maung Zaw said authorities dropped the more serious charges of importing a drone without permission and immigration violations against the foreigners after concluding that the journalists and their staff did not intent to endanger national security.

Authorities also wanted to maintain good diplomatic relations with the countries of the two journalists, he said.

Myanmar journalist Aung Naing Soe arrives for a hearing on his trial at Zabu Court in Naypyitaw. Photo: EPA

The journalists and their staff were detained on October 27 after trying to fly a drone over the legislative complex in the capital, Naypitaw.

In a separate case on Wednesday, a court extended the detention of two Reuters journalists and set their trial for January 10 on charges of violating state secrets.

Reuters journalist Wa Lone, also known as Thet Oo Maung Maung. Photo: Kyodo

Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo were arrested December 12 for acquiring “important secret papers” from two policemen. The police officers had worked in Rakhine state, where abuses widely blamed on the military have driven more than 630,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee into neighbouring Bangladesh. The charges are punishable by up to 14 years in prison.

Rights and media groups have criticised the new civilian government led by the Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi for continuing to use colonial-era laws to threaten and imprison journalists. Such laws were widely used by a military junta that had ruled Myanmar to muzzle critics and the media.

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