Acts of Oppression: Censorship and the law in Burma

Description: 

"Freedom of expression has been one of the prime casualties of prolonged military rule in Burma. Since the army first began controlling the levers of state power in 1962, numerous publications have been censored or banned; hundreds of journalists, writers, poets, playwrights and cartoonists, as well as pro-democracy activists have been arrested, detained or sentenced to long prison terms, tortured, ill-treated or otherwise harassed, even killed, and tens of thousands of ordinary people have been punished simply for peacefully expressing their views. The impact has been immense and crippling, reverberating through all aspects of life in Burma and blighting the country?s social, cultural and, particularly, economic development. Years of strong-arm military dictatorship and misrule, buttressed by one of the world?s severest censorship regimes and systematic abuse of human rights, have driven thousands of Burma?s citizens to seek refuge abroad and marked out Burma as a pariah within the international community of nation states..." Contents: I) INTRODUCTION; II) POLITICAL AND CONSTITUTIONAL BACKGROUND; III) FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION: AN HISTORICAL OVERVIEW; IV) THE STATE OF THE RULE OF LAW; V) FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AND ITS PROTECTION IN LAW: (a) The constitutional position; (b) Specific legislative measures: a detailed analysis: 1 The Printers and Publishers Registration Law 1962; 2 Emergency Provisions Act 1950; 3 State Protection Law 1975; 4 The Television and Video Law; 5 The Motion Picture Law; 6 The Computer Science Development Law; 7 The Official Secrets Act 1923; 8 Other Laws. VI) EXTRA-LEGAL DENIAL OF FREE SPEECH. VII) CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS.

Creator/author: 

Venkat Iyer

Source/publisher: 

Article 19 (ISBN 1 902598 04 0)

Date of Publication: 

1999-03-00

Date of entry: 

2003-06-03

Grouping: 

  • Individual Documents

Category: 

Language: 

English

Local URL: 

Format: 

htm

Size: 

102.08 KB