Myanmar Pressphoto Agency camera operator Hmu Yadanar Khet Moh Moh Tun is serving a 13-year sentence for terrorism and criminal incitement, the latter an anti-state charge Myanmar’s military regime has used broadly to stifle independent news reporting since staging a democracy-suspending coup in 2021.
Moh Moh Tun was arrested on December 5, 2021, while covering an anti-coup protest on Phap Pingyi Road in the Kyimindaing Township of Yangon. She and fellow Myanmar Pressphoto Agency photographer Kaung Sett Lin were both seriously injured when authorities rammed a military vehicle into the anti-coup protest.
Both journalists were taken to Yangon’s Military Hospital No. 2 for treatment. Moh Moh Tun sustained a serious head injury that required surgery and was unconscious for over a day after being injured in the military’s assault on the protest, The Irrawaddy reported. Several protesters were shot and killed during the military’s suppression of the protest, according to local news reports.
The journalists’ arrests came in the wake of the military’s February 1, 2021, coup and subsequent protests. Since then, the military junta has engaged in an ongoing crackdown on Myanmar’s independent media, detaining and sentencing dozens of journalists.
In early December 2022, a court in Insein Prison in Yangon sentenced Moh Moh Tun to three years in prison under Article 505(a) of the penal code, the provision that criminalizes incitement and the dissemination of false news, according to a Myanmar Pressphoto Agency report.
On May 26, 2023, Yangon’s Thingangyun District Court convicted Moh Moh Tun and sentenced her to an additional 10 years in prison with hard labor under Section 50(j) of the Counter Terrorism Law, a provision relating to terror financing, according to news reports and the agency’s editor J Paing, who communicated with CPJ by email.
Moh Moh Tun was moved from Yangon’s Military Hospital No. 2 to Yangon’s Insein Prison on May 11, 2022, according to J Paing, Myanmar Pressphoto Agency’s chief editor, who communicated with CPJ via email.
She was no longer in a wheelchair and was able to walk with crutches as of September 2023 and had a second surgery on her leg in late 2023, the MPA editor said.
She was still using crutches for mobility and suffered from chronic pain throughout 2024, J Paing told CPJ via messaging app. She was being held at Insein Prison and allowed monthly family visits and medicine deliveries late in the year, he told CPJ.
The Ministry of Information did not reply to CPJ’s late 2024 emailed request for comment on Moh Moh Tun’s convictions, legal status, injuries, health, and treatment in detention.