Justice for Myanmar

[1] Since its launch, the group has published a number of high-profile exposés related to the business dealings of high-ranking military and government officials in the country, in a campaign to publicly pressure the dismantling of the Burmese military's business practices and systemic corruption.

[3][4][5] On 29 August 2020, Telenor Myanmar issued a statement confirming that it had complied with the government directive, but noted its position on freedom of expression and the right of access to information.

[8] In May 2020, JFM exposed a lucrative lease agreement between the military and a Japanese-led development consortium that is building the $330 million Y Complex on the former site of Jubilee Hall in Yangon.

[9][10] In September 2020, Justice for Myanmar, in collaboration with Amnesty International, published an expose demonstrating how revenue from the military-owned Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited, including in joint ventures with international firms like Kirin Brewery, are used to fund military operations, and reward and punish soldiers with shareholder dividends.

[17][18] The report also noted the Burmese military's ability to harvest personal data from Mytel users for surveillance purposes.