Tourist in Myanmar jailed for pulling plug on Buddhist sermon
6 October 2016 The Guardian
Dutchman gets three months for ‘interfering with prayers’ near Mandalay hotel and fine for violating the culture
A court in Myanmar has sentenced a Dutch citizen to three months in prison for interfering with a religious observance by unplugging an amplifier broadcasting a late-night Buddhist sermon near his hotel in Mandalay.
Klaas Haytema, who wept with his girlfriend before he left for jail in handcuffs, was arrested late September after a crowd gathered around his hotel in protest when the loudspeakers at a nearby religious hall were turned off. The man who was reciting the sermon pressed charges against Haytema.
Local media reported that the 30-year-old had apologised and said he that he had not known the loudspeakers were broadcasting religious content.
Haytema was fined 100,000 kyats (about £62) for violating visa regulations requiring him to respect the culture. He could have been sentenced to up to two years in prison for insulting religion in the predominantly Buddhist country, but the judge said he opted to find him guilty on the lesser charge, to “show mercy”.
It was unclear if Haytema would file an appeal.
Mandalay, a tourist attraction in central Myanmar, is the country’s cultural capital and former seat of Burmese kings. It is culturally and religiously conservative.
In early 2015 a Myanmar court sentenced a New Zealand bar manager, Phil Blackwood, to two years in prison after he posted an image of Buddha wearing headphones on the bar’s official Facebook page in late 2014. Blackwood was released in an amnesty earlier this year.
It is common for Buddhist groups to broadcast sermons by loudspeaker at very high volumes. One local government reportedly has proposed noise-control rules. Supporters quoted by local media said the proposal was meant to alleviate stress caused to the elderly and the ill.
Chit San, a community leader involved in Haytema’s case, said he called police when tempers flared after Haytema acted. “We could not negotiate peacefully because people were angry, so we called the police to control the situation,” Chit San said. “We actually didn’t want him to get arrested.”
The man who reciting sermon should have consulted the abbot or wiser buddhist before pressing charges. The essence of buddhism is saving others, and thus must not as much as possible resorting to law enforcement officers, which will cause trauma on trivial matters. Unless it causes intentional damage to property, mental & physical safety of others, even so, it should not be in the name of buddhism. Sermon is awesome, but not all beings equally as attached to awesome like sermon reciting, this is because beings reciting sermon and sage reciting sermon is cosmosly different, one is heaven whereas the other is earth. So, jail is too much