Assistant Pastors Charged by Burmese Authorities with Unlawful Association
Kachin Baptist Convention church leaders deny charges
By Michael Ireland, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
MAE SOT, THAILAND (ANS, January 27, 2017)
-- Morning Star News is reporting that the Burma (also known as
Myanmar) military on Wednesday (Jan. 25) charged two assistant pastors
(not Catholic priests as previously reported) with unlawful association
with an armed ethnic group, an accusation the Kachin Baptist Convention
church leaders deny.
The Burma Correspondent for the online news outlet (www.morningstarnews.org)
says Pastors Dom Dawng Nawng Latt, 65, and 35-year-old La Jaw Gam Hseng
face at least three years in prison under one charge and at least five
years on another. Sources said they were arrested on Dec. 24 for helping
journalists cover the Burma military’s Nov. 23-24 bombing of the St.
Francis Xavier Catholic Church building.
“They
helped the journalists because local priests were not allowed to speak
to media,” Zau Rau, an official from Kachin Baptist Convention (KBC) in
Muse Town, Shan state, who visited the two pastors this week, told
Morning Star News. “We even heard that the Burma Army hid the priests
from media. So, they spoke on behalf of the Catholic Church.”
An
officer from the Muse town police station who requested anonymity said
Maj. Kyaw Zin Htun of the Light Infantry Battalion 66 of the Burma army
is the prosecutor who filed the charges under articles 17/1 and 17/2 of
the Unlawful Association Act, which carry prison terms of at least three
years and five years respectively. The Burma army has accused the two
pastors of recruiting and spying for ethnic armed groups such as the
Kachin Independence Army (KIA), which is fighting government forces in
northern Shan state, eastern Burma.
“The
prosecutor charged those [two pastors] with illegal acts for contacting
an illegal organization under Article 17/1 and Section 17/2,” the
police officer said.
Morning
Star News said the military has accused the two men of serving as
“informers and spreading false news on behalf of the armed insurgents,”
according to a report by the Information Committee of the State
Counsellor’s Office on Jan. 19.
The KBC’s Rau said the two pastors denied the charges.
“They
said they were not spies for the Kachin armed group,” he said. “I also
know them the best, because they are members of KBC. They are our
people. They don’t work for the Kachin armed group. We will help them
with legal issues.”
The
KBC is the largest Baptist organization in Kachin state. Rau said that
the two pastors witnessed the bombing of the Catholic church building.
They photographed the damaged building and helped journalists to take
photographs of it, he said.
“They
took journalists and explained how the church was bombed,” Rau said. He
said the two pastors were in good health, adding, “We didn’t see any
wound on their bodies.”
Morning
Star News said the military, which had detained the two men at its base
in Mong Ko, handed over the two pastors to civilian police custody in
Muse town on Jan. 22. Sources said the pastors had gone to the Byuha Gon
military base to negotiate the release of a civilian couple who had
complained to army officials about the destruction of their house.
Military officials released the couple and detained the clergymen, they
said.
The
news outlet stated that armed conflict between Burma and ethnic
separatist organizations erupted anew in northern Shan state in
November, forcing over 50,000 refugees in total to flee to other areas
of the state and the border with China.
The
outlet explained that after more than five years of intensified
conflict since Burma violated a 17-year cease-fire in 2011, many Kachin
face protracted displacement and are desperate to return home, according
to a report by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.
The
Burma army launched major offensives against the KIA for several months
last year and took over several strategic military bases.
Earlier
this month, Burma authorities restricted Yanghee Lee, the United
Nations special rapporteur on human rights in Burma, from visiting
refugees in some conflict-torn areas in Kachin state.
Burma
is about 80 percent Buddhist and 9 percent Christian. The government
has recognized the special status of Buddhism in Burma and promoted it
as a means to consolidate support.
Burma
ranked 28th on Christian support organization Open Doors’ 2017 World
Watch List of the 50 countries where it is most difficult to be a
Christian.
Photo captions: 1) Pastor Dom Dawng Nawng Latt. 2) Bombed Catholic church. 3) Michael Ireland.
About
the Writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for
ANS since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. Please consider
helping Michael cover his expenses in bringing news of the Persecuted
Church, by logging-on to: https://actintl.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael
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