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People outside Insein prison in Yangon where many of Burma's political prisoners are held
People outside Insein prison in Yangon where many of Burma's political prisoners are held. Photograph: Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters
People outside Insein prison in Yangon where many of Burma's political prisoners are held. Photograph: Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters

Burma pardons more political prisoners

This article is more than 11 years old
President Thein Sein frees 93 people, believed to include 59 jailed as dissidents, after EU lifts sanctions

Burma's president has pardoned 93 prisoners, including at least 59 political detainees, a day after the European Union lifted sanctions.

The pardon was announced on state television on Tuesday amid renewed calls for Thein Sein's government to release hundreds more political prisoners still believed to be behind bars.

Myanmar has routinely denied the existence of political prisoners, saying all people sentenced to jail have been convicted legitimately of breaking the nation's laws. Nevertheless hundreds of prominent political detainees have been freed since the former general took office two years ago after a long-ruling army junta was dissolved.

In February Thein Sein appointed a 16-member committee to review the cases of inmates identified by opposition groups as prisoners of conscience. Some cases are complicated because they involve bombings or threats to state security or national stability. Rights groups say many other people were wrongfully convicted and given extreme sentences for actions that would not be considered crimes elsewhere.

Ye Aung, a former prisoner and a member of the government committee, said at least 59 political prisoners were released on Tuesday. At least 300 more were still locked up, most of them members of ethnic minorities.

Opposition leaders and rights groups have accused the government of using political prisoners as "bargaining chips" – releasing some to prove progress but holding others to push the west to go further with easing more sanctions.

The last major prisoner release coincided with a visit to the country by Barack Obama. Tuesday's pardon came after the European Union dropped all political and economic sanctions against Burma to support the country's "remarkable process" in democratic reforms, while warning that it must control recent ethnic violence.

"Amnesties almost always coincide with international events. Today's amnesty coincides with the lifting of EU sanctions," said Ko Ko Gyi, who was released from jail in 2012 and is one of the country's most prominent former political prisoners. "The government should acknowledge the existence of political prisoners and release them all."

One of those released on Tuesday from Yangon's notorious Insein prison, Zaw Moe, said he was among at least five political prisoners freed there. But he said he could not be content because "many of my friends remain" behind bars. "I'm worried about them."

Zaw Moe had been sentenced to an 18-year term in 2008 for alleged links to dissident groups fighting against the former military government.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Distrustful Rohingya dig in as Burma braces for cyclone Mahasen

  • Burma: the EU has been too quick to lift sanctions

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