Whether taken from their homes in the middle of the night or grabbed off the streets during protests, hundreds of people have been arrested in the weeks since Myanmar's military coup, leading human rights groups and experts to fear a sizable expansion in the number of political prisoners in the country.
As of Tuesday, some 696 people including monks, writers, activists, politicians and others had been arrested in relation to the coup, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, or AAPP, a Myanmar-based organisation.
Many of those arrested were charged using a legacy of laws some dating back to British colonial times and others instituted under previous military regimes that have been used against critics by every government, including the one led by Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party, which was ousted in the Feb. 1 coup.
The National League for Democracy was comfortable leaving repressive laws on the books because in some instances they felt they might be able to take advantage of those laws themselves, said Ronan Lee, a visiting scholar at Queen Mary University of London's International State Crime Initiative.
It's now clear that some of those laws are now going to be weaponised against democracy campaigners in a way that maybe the National League for Democracy didn't foresee, Lee said.
While the military continues to use and amend old laws to crack down on dissidents, new laws are being introduced as well, signalling the military's intent to continue arresting protesters.
The hundreds arrested since the coup join the already hundreds of political prisoners in the country who were imprisoned both under the previous junta and the National League for Democracy, or NLD.
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We have now seen not just a new generation of political prisoners, but also the retargeting of former political prisoners, said Manny Maung, a Myanmar researcher at New York-based Human Rights Watch.
During the NLD's rule, journalists, critics of the military and the government, and others were charged under colonial-era laws. According to the AAPP, Myanmar had over 700 political prisoners as of Jan. 31, with hundreds being charged during the NLD's time in power.
Many of the repressive laws used against dissidents date back to the country's colonial era.
After over 120 years of British colonial rule, Myanmar, then called Burma, became an independent republic in 1948. Though no longer a British territory, the country retained many of its colonial-era laws, which were designed in nature to be repressive and silence political opponents, said Nick Cheeseman, a fellow at the Department of Political and Social Change at Australian National University.
In 1962, the military took control of the country through a coup, and it remained under junta rule for decades. Under the junta, people were regularly imprisoned for speaking out against the military. Those arrested were often sent to prison for years, and torture including beatings, waterboarding, and deprivation of food and sleep was commonplace, according to the AAPP. Suu Kyi was kept under house arrest for 15 years over a 21-year period during this time.
Before democratic reforms eventually took place a period during which Suu Kyi was released from house arrest, her political party agreed to participate in 2012 by-elections and press censorship was softened Amnesty International estimated that Myanmar had more than 1,000 political prisoners, calling it one of the highest of such populations worldwide.
In the years following Suu Kyi's 2010 release from house arrest, a prisoner amnesty led to the freeing of thousands of inmates, including some 200 political prisoners, while others remained incarcerated.
For many observers, this signaled hope for further reforms, a view bolstered when Suu Kyi's party took power following a landslide victory in 2015 elections.
But hope quickly dissipated in the years that followed, as repressive laws widely stayed on the books and political prisoners remained without official recognition.
The lack of repealing hard criminal codes left some free-speech and other activist groups upset in Myanmar, but really didn't impact how many in the West interacted with Aung San Suu Kyi or her government, said Lee, the scholar.
What the military is trying to do is use the laws to add some legitimacy to their illegitimate grab for power and the NLD gave them an opportunity to do that by leaving old laws intact, Lee said. But there's also no question that if these laws didn't work for the military, they'd still find other ways of arresting people.
Since this month's coup, the military has also amended old penal codes and proposed new laws that experts say could be used as further tools to crack down on dissidents.
For example, amendments made on February 14 to the country's Penal Code sections on High Treason state that people can be sentenced to up to 20 years for planning to hinder the success of defence or law enforcement.
A controversial proposed cybersecurity law demands the elimination of online comments considered to be misinformation or disinformation that might cause hate or disrupt stability, and any comment that might violate any existing law. Those who are deemed to break the law can be sentenced to up to three years in prison.
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