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Burma warns 'false news’ being spread to discredit Aung San Suu Kyi government

Police pledge to prosecute those responsible for dissemination of what they deem to be misinformation about country's political stability and plight of Rohingya Muslims

Simon Lewis
Friday 05 May 2017 09:17 EDT
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Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi
Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi (EPA)

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Burma's government has warned the public that false news and rumours are being spread by unidentified people wishing to cause “political instability” during the tenure of leader Aung San Suu Kyi, state-run media said on Friday.

Nobel laureate Suu Kyi took power in April 2016 as part of a transition from military rule.

Her first year in power has been beset by bureaucratic inertia, ethnic and religious tensions, and conflicts that have displaced tens of thousands, including an estimated 75,000 Rohingya Muslims who fled to Bangladesh amid a military crackdown late last year.

Rumours emerged in recent days that President Htin Kyaw - who Suu Kyi picked for head of state - would step down. Suu Kyi directs the civilian administration in the specially created role of state counsellor because the constitution - drafted by the still-powerful military - bars her from the presidency.

Police said they would prosecute those responsible for the information, which has spread quickly on online social networks that have grown in popularity amid expanding freedoms and internet access in Burma.

“False news regarding the president and the state counsellor have been spread on purpose by using accounts with false names,” Suu Kyi's office carried in the government's Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper on Friday.

It named two Facebook accounts that it said had published “fabricated news”.

“It has been found that these acts are being done intentionally to cause political instability during the tenure of the incumbent government,” Suu Kyi's office said, adding that the perpetrators wished to “create a situation among the people to live in fear and anxiety due to the spread of rumours”.

Police Colonel Myo Thu Soe, national police spokesman, told Reuters an investigation was being launched and anyone intentionally spreading false news would be brought to court.

"We will conduct a focused and intensive search for those responsible for this," Myo Thu Soe said.

Copyright Reuters

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