Tens of thousands of people yesterday gathered in the Burmese city of Yangon for the funeral of Ko Ni, a Muslim lawyer shot dead the previous day who was involved in efforts to amend a military-drafted constitution.
The 63-year-old was an expert in constitutional law and adviser to Burmese State Councilor Aung San Suu Kyi’s ruling National League for Democracy (NLD) party that came to power in April.
He was also a prominent member of Myanmar’s Muslim minority.
Photo: Reuters
His killing, amid heightened communal and religious tension in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, appears to be a rare act of political violence in the former capital that coincided with a tough security operation in a northwestern region populated mostly by Muslims.
Police have arrested a 53-year-old man, suspected to be the lone gunman who shot Ko Ni in the head while the lawyer held his grandson outside Yangon’s international airport on Sunday evening.
He had just returned from a trip to Indonesia, where Burmese government officials and Muslim community leaders discussed with Indonesian counterparts issues of reconciliation.
Taxi driver Nay Win, 42, was also killed when he attempted to apprehend the gunman, state media reported.
Police Colonel Myo Thu Soe said the suspect, Kyi Linn, was from central Myanmar’s Yinmabin Township and had served two stints in jail for trafficking religious antiques.
Kyi Linn was last released in a 2014 amnesty by then-Burmese president Thein Sein, he said, adding that the suspect had not given clear answers during interrogation.
“We cannot say exactly why he killed or who was behind him,” Myo Thu Soe said.
An estimated 100,000 mourners, including family members, lawyers, NLD activists and members of Yangon’s diplomatic corps, attended Ko Ni’s funeral beginning at a Muslim cemetery in northern Yangon.
Aung Sang Suu Kyi was not in attendance and has yet to comment on the killing.
Her party on Sunday said that Ko Ni’s death was “a great loss for which there is no substitute.”
Khin Maung Htay, a colleague of Ko Ni’s at the Yangon-based Laurel Law Firm, said Ko Ni was instrumental in devising the role of “state counselor” for Aung San Suu Kyi, enabling her to lead the government.
The 2008 constitution, drawn up by the then ruling military, bars the Nobel laureate from the presidency because she has family members who are foreign citizens.
Ko Ni was working on amendments that would further challenge the role of the military, which retains a quarter of parliamentary seats and controls security ministries under the charter.
Aung Shin, a member of the NLD’s central committee, said the murder was a “well-planned, fearless conspiracy” to kill a man who had extensive legal expertise and an ability to communicate the flaws of the 2008 constitution to the public.
Ko Ni was also spearheading a new Interfaith Harmony Bill that would include provisions on hate speech, hate crimes and discrimination, according to two experts working with him on the draft legislation.
Family members and friends said that Ko Ni had received death threats connected to his political work, but the motive for the killing was not known.
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