Myanmar jails Japanese filmmaker for sedition

Reuters

Published Oct 05, 2022 10:14PM ET

Updated Oct 06, 2022 04:06AM ET

TOKYO (Reuters) - A court in military-ruled Myanmar has sentenced a Japanese documentary filmmaker to 10 years in prison for violating sedition and communications laws, a Japanese foreign ministry official said on Thursday.

Toru Kubota, 26, was arrested in July at a protest in Myanmar's main city of Yangon. At the time, it was reported he faced charges of breaking an immigration law and encouraging dissent against the ruling military.

Kubota was on Wednesday sentenced to three years in prison for sedition and seven years for violating a law on telecommunications, the ministry official said, citing the filmmaker's lawyer.

However, he was expected to serve the sentences concurrently, media in Myanmar reported, citing the junta's communications team.

A court hearing on his alleged violation of the immigration control law was scheduled for Oct. 12, the Japanese ministry official said.

"We have been asking Myanmar authorities for Mr. Kubota's early release, and we intend to keep on doing so," he said.

Calls to a Myanmar military spokesperson seeking comment were not answered. The junta says Myanmar's courts are independent and those arrested are receiving due process.