Reuters :
Maung Saung Kha, a prominent Myanmar poet and activist, appeared in court on Tuesday to face accusations that he helped stage an unlawful protest demanding an end to internet blackouts imposed on two of the country’s poorest states. Since June last year, authorities have shut the internet in Rakhine and neighbouring Chin states – home to about a million people.
Justified on emergency grounds amid a growing insurgency, it is the longest internet blackout in the world, rights groups say.
“People are in a difficult situation because the internet is being shut down and so activists are doing their duty and organising protests,” Maung Saung Kha told reporters at the end of the hearing in a court in the city of Yangon.
The free-speech activist is accused of putting up a protest banner and faces a police lawsuit filed under part of a Peaceful Assembly Law, which outlaws unauthorised assemblies and can carry a maximum three-month prison sentence, a fine or both.
Rakhine State is the region from which hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims fled in 2017 after a military crackdown that the government said was ordered in response to attacks by Rohingya insurgents.
But since then, a new conflict has emerged between the army and rebels from the largely Buddhist Rakhine ethnic group, a majority in the state.