Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Digital News

ERO Boston arrests Guatemalan...

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Enforcement and Removal Operations Boston apprehended an unlawfully present 20-year-old...
HomePoliticsVOA Journalists Inside...

VOA Journalists Inside Burma Report on Suu Kyi Trial

Washington, D.C., May 22, 2009 – Journalists operating inside Burma
are filing a steady stream of exclusive video and audio reports for
Voice of America’s (VOA) Burmese Service on the trial of pro-democracy
leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Despite significant newsgathering challenges, the reporters are
providing video footage, photographs and first-hand accounts of the
latest developments surrounding the trial of Aung San Suu Kyi, who has
been under house arrest for 13 of the last 19 years. Stories have
included interviews with supporters of Suu Kyi, and video showing tight
security at the site of the trial.

Suu Kyi faces charges she broke the terms of her house arrest by
allowing an American visitor, John Yettaw, to stay at her home after he
swam, uninvited, across a lake to reach her home.

Although the Burmese government has banned the press for all but one
of the five days since the trial began, VOA has used a variety of
means, such as satellite uplinks, internet circuitry and cellphones, to
circumvent the government’s efforts.

“Our role in providing accurate news and information is especially
critical at a time like this,” explained Than Lwin Htun, head of VOA’s
Burmese Service.

“Many unreliable sources of information are seizing this opportunity
to spread rumors and disinformation through blogs and email
communications,” he said. “When the audience tunes in to VOA
broadcasts, they are hearing the facts without any of the
sensationalism that is commonplace now that the trial is under
way.”

VOA Burmese broadcasts 3.5 hours of radio programming a day on
shortwave and AM frequencies. The service also broadcasts a 30-minute TV program every Sunday via satellite, which repeats daily throughout the week. These broadcasts as well as other
special features are also available on its website, www.VOANews.com/Burmese/.
More than 21% of the adult population in Burma tunes in to VOA
broadcasts on a weekly basis.

The Voice of America, which first went on the air in 1942, is a
multimedia international broadcasting service funded by the U.S.
Government through the Broadcasting Board of Governors. VOA broadcasts
approximately 1,500 hours of news, information, educational, and
cultural programming every week to an estimated worldwide audience of
more than 134 million people. Programs are produced in 45 languages.

For more information, please call VOA Public Relations at (202)
203-4959, or e-mail
[email protected]
.

Originally published at https://www.insidevoa.com/a/a-13-34-2009-05-22-voa57-111612444/178406.html

- Powered by VUGA -content marketing