Ko Ni was a prominent Burmese lawyer and an expert on constitutional law. He was assassinated in Yangon, Myanmar, on 29 January 2017.
Early life
Ko Ni was born near Katha in Sagaing Division, Myanmar. A Burmese Muslim, his father was Sultan, a Muslim from India, and his mother was Khin Hla, a Burmese Buddhist. His father had come to Burma in the early 1900s through his work with the British Indian Army. His mother herself had a Muslim father and a Buddhist mother.
He joined the National League for Democracy officially on 8 October 2013, after being a legal advisor to Aung San Suu Kyi for many years before that. He was credited with finding loopholes in the 2008 Constitution of Myanmar and in particular with creating the office of state counsellor, which enabled Aung San Suu Kyi to become the de factohead of government in 2016. He advocated constitutional change in Myanmar, believing that the 2008 Constitution, which was drafted by the military, should be replaced and not merely amended. He wrote six books on human rights issues and democratic elections, and was actively involved in the interfaith movement. He also spoke out against the Myanmar nationality law that stripped the Muslim minority Rohingya of Burmese citizenship.
Police arrested Kyi Lin, the gunman, shortly after the shooting. The gunman had also shot a taxi driver who attempted to intervene. Allegations emerged in social media that Kyaw Swe, the Minister of Home Affairs and former Commander of South-west Command in Pathein, Ayeyarwady Region had orchestrated the killing. The assistant secretary of the Home Affairs Ministry, Maung Maung Myint, issued a statement on 1 February 2017, denying the allegations as "rumors."
Senior NLD leader Tin Oo described Ko Ni's death as a "great loss for the country, for democratic forces and for us ". US AmbassadorScot Marciel said: "All I want to say is, of course we are all shocked and really sad. I knew Ko Ni and his commitment to his country and democracy." Amnesty International said the killing had "all the hallmarks of an assassination". It called for a thorough investigation into the death of a man it described as a "tireless human rights campaigner".