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Myanmar military revokes citizenship of opposition members it says ‘harmed the national interest’

  • State said 11 leaders of the opposition have had their citizenship terminated because they allegedly fled the country and harmed the national interest
  • Included were 8 members of the shadow National Unity Government, established by elected legislators barred from taking their seats after last year’s coup

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Human rights activist Aung Myo Min said it is illegal for Myanmar’s military to revoke citizenships.

Myanmar’s ruling military council has announced the revocation of the citizenship of top members of the main group that have been coordinating resistance to army rule.

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The announcement broadcast on state-run MRTV television on Friday said 11 leaders of the opposition to military rule have had their citizenship terminated because they had allegedly fled the country and harmed the national interest.

It targeted eight members of the shadow National Unity Government, which views itself as the country’s legitimate ruling authority, and three prominent activists.

The NUG was established by elected legislators who were barred from taking their seats when the military seized power in February last year, ousting the civilian government of Aung San Suu Kyi. Resistance to the takeover has now led to what some UN experts have characterised as a civil war.

At least two members of the NUG Cabinet named in the announcement responded on Twitter on Saturday.

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Aung Myo Min, the human rights minister who has been travelling in Europe to seek support for the Myanmar resistance movement, said the announcement was illegal because the military council is not the legitimate government.

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