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Imprisoned for doing politics’: Myanmar junta releases over 6,000 prisoners in annual amnesty

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YANGON: Myanmar’s junta said on Sunday it would release more than 6,000 prisoners as part of an annual amnesty to mark the country’s independence day.

The military has arrested thousands of protesters and activists since its February 2021 coup that ended Myanmar’s brief democratic experiment and plunged the nation into civil war.The yearly prisoner amnesty “on humanitarian and compassionate grounds”, according to the national security council, comes as the country marks 78 years of independence from British colonial rule.

Hundreds of people were waiting for the release of their family members outside Yangon’s Insein prison on Sunday, holding papers with names of prisoners on them, an AFP journalist said.Myanmar’s junta opened voting in a phased month-long election a week ago, with its leaders pledging the poll would bring on democracy.

However, rights advocates and Western diplomats have condemned it as a sham and a rebranding of martial rule.

The pro-military Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) has a decisive lead in the first phase, with the USDP winning 90 percent of the lower house seats announced so far, according to official results published in state media on Saturday and Sunday.

“I am waiting for my dad to be released. He was arrested and imprisoned for doing politics,” said one man outside the prison, which is notorious for alleged brutal rights abuses.The USDP — which many analysts describe as a civilian proxy of the military — has won 87 of the 96 lower house seats announced, the results published in the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper showed. Six ethnic minority parties picked up nine seats. The winners of six townships have yet to be announced in the first phase of voting. Two more phases are scheduled for January 11 and 25.

The massively popular but dissolved National League for Democracy (NLD) of democratic figurehead Aung San Suu Kyi did not appear on ballots, and she has been jailed sinceThe military and USDP then alleged massive voter fraud, claims that international monitors say were unfounded.

The junta has said turnout in the first phase last month exceeded 50 percent of eligible voters, below the 2020 participation rate of around 70 percent.

A key aide to Aung San Suu Kyi was among hundreds of prisoners freed by the junta in a pre-election amnesty in November.

Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing has pardoned 6,134 imprisoned Myanmar nationals, the National Defence and Security Council said in a statement.

Fifty-two foreign prisoners were also to be released and deported, it said in a separate statement.

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