New York, November 11, 2008--The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the long prison sentence handed down by a Burmese court to blogger Nay Phone Latt, who has been held in detention since his arrest on January 29.
Nay Phone Latt was sentenced on Monday by a special
court established within Ragoon's notorious Insein Prison, where the convicted
blogger is scheduled to serve his sentence. The trial was held behind closed
doors, and the 28-year-old blogger's family members were barred from attending.
Among other controversial blog entries, he had posted a caricature of military
leader Than Shwe, according to the BBC.
The sentence, which amounts to 20 and a half years, includes two years for violating Article 505 (b) of the Criminal Code for causing "public alarm," three and a half years for violating Article 32 (b) of the Video Act, and 15 years for transgressing Article 33 of the Electronic Act, according to the Burma Media Association, a press freedom advocacy group, and news reports.
Nay Phone Latt's lawyer, Aung Thein, was found in contempt of court for complaining of unfair treatment during earlier proceedings and was sentenced to four months in prison. Neither he nor any other defense lawyer was present during the blogger's sentencing, according to news reports.
Nay Phone Latt, a former member of the opposition National League for Democracy, was an influential blogger during the September 2007 popular uprising, known as the Saffron Revolution, which military forces eventually put down by force. The charges against him included possession without official permission of a video of the unrest.
"The 20-year prison sentence handed down to blogger
Nay Phone Latt shows how desperate the ruling military junta is to control
The government appears to be expediting the trials of dissidents imprisoned for involvement in last year's anti-government unrest. Fourteen activists were each given 65-year sentences today for multiple charges, according to international news reports. Other trials are still ongoing.
In March CPJ conducted a research mission to Burma to gauge Internet
freedom in the wake of the Saffron Revolution.

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