The monks are taken to the State
Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee office on Wednesday after a raid on Maha
Thandi Thukha Monastery (Photo-EMG)
Five Buddhist monks from Maha
Thandi Thukha monastery in Yangon were disrobed and remanded at Insein
prison for offending the religious ruling committee, temple followers
said.
The religious dispute came to the head
on Tuesday when police, officials from Religious Affairs Ministry and
some 250 monks from Yangon Sangha Nayaka Committee raided and shut down
the monastery, run by abbot the venerable Penang Sayadaw.
The authorities took some 20 monks into custody.
Sein Maw, the head of Yangon Region Religious Affairs Department, said 15 of 20 detained monks were already released.
The remaining five detainees, including
the abbot’s disciple English national Sayadaw U Ottara, have been
charged for religious offence under Section 295 (a) 20/90 of the Penal
Code.
“Monks have to disrobe themselves if
they are tried. I don’t know where they are being held. Fifteen were
released after questioning. We have to charge the remaining five. We do
not want to harm both sides – the State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee
(the ruling body for Buddhist monks) and the detained monks. We are
obliged to carry out the order of the ruling committee,” said Sein Maw.
Film star Khin Than Nwe, abbot’s
disciple, said Tamwe Township police station had informed her about
defrocking and remanding the monks.
After witnessing the trial at Tamwe
Township Court, a monk U Pamaukkha said: “I asked the court officials
whether they were being tried as monks or laymen. I was told they were
brought to court after being disrobed. The trial will resume June 20.”
A monk, U Pamaukkha, who visited the trial at Tamwe Township Court said:
“I want to demand that they should be
unconditionally released. I also want to urge those Buddhism followers
to work together (in securing the release),” said the monk.
The five monks were charged for
religious offence even though director Tun Nyunt from the ministry had
given assurance on Wednesday that the case would be handled by a highest
level body formed by SSMNC.
“Similar cases had been filed in our
office and no one was arrested by our office,” said an officer from
Tamwe Township police station. “Now, SSMNC has directly filed a lawsuit
at the court. Police involvement in the raid was aimed at preventing
conflict. Charging five monks after disrobing them is just an alleged
report.”
Some people recall that the incident is
similar to what happened in 1999 and 2007 under the junta. Some
well-educated Buddhist monks were forced to disrobe and put in prison
for their anti-government protests.
Meanwhile, public criticism has spread
that charging and defrocking the monks without the knowledge of their
relatives and giving them no chance to consult with lawyers is
tantamount to tampering with the judicial system.
“Any Buddhist monk could be defrocked and sued if they clashed with the government or the SSMNC,” said U Pamaukkha.
The monastery raid occurred when the
abbot was on a five-day trip to Japan which began on June 5. The
three-storey monastery building was under the care of two monks – U
Panyeinda and U Oattara.
The abbot has been disputing with the
SSMNC over the ownership of the monastery for more than a decade. The
ministry reportedly backs the SSMNC, leading to the raid.
Following the ministry’s press conference on Wednesday, the monks were disrobed and charged.
____ EMG
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