In October 2019, the military brought a case against Saw Wai and two other activists for remarks they made at a public gathering in April 2019 in support of Parliament’s decision to create a committee to draft amendments to Myanmar’s constitution. He remains on trial in connection with these allegations. Following the February 1, 2021 coup in Myanmar, the junta has further targeted writers including Saw Wai.
Case History
Saw Wai was arrested on January 2, 2008, after his poem “February the Fourteenth,” an eight-line verse about Valentine’s Day, was published in the Rangoon-based weekly magazine Love Journal. An acrostic poem, when the first letters of each line are put together, they read “General Than Shwe is crazy with power” in Burmese. The weekly magazine quickly sold out as word spread of the coded message.
In October 2019, the Kawthaung Township Court accepted a case against Saw Wai and two other activists brought by the Myanmar military, known as the Tatmadaw, for alleged defamatory statements made at a public gathering in April 2019. The remarks were reportedly in support of Parliament’s decision to create a committee to draft amendments to Myanmar’s constitution. Saw Wai remains on trial in connection with these allegations.
A court set Saw Wai’s trial to begin on January 20, 2020; however, neither party appeared. Despite the fact that Saw Wai reported never receiving a legal summons to appear for his trial, the court issued an arrest warrant for Saw Wai. On February 3, 2020, Saw Wai appeared in court, and the court cancelled the arrest warrant. Saw Wai was granted bail and did not spend time in jail–an unusual occurrence under Section 505(a), which was allowed because of his compromised age and health. On May 31, 2021, following the military coup, the junta made allegations to abduct his daughter and announce her as a criminal.