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After the Myanmar military regime recently executed the death penalty for four members of the Democratic camp, the opposition group, resistance against the Myanmar military government has grown stronger.

The bereaved family of a first-generation hip-hop singer in Myanmar, one in four executed, informed us of the local situation.



This is the exclusive report by Ayoung Kim.



<Reporter> This



is a music video for the Myanmar hip-hop group ACID.



This rapper is Mr. Pyo Jeya Toto, who was executed by the military regime on the 23rd.



A first-generation rapper and top star in Myanmar, he turned into a civil rights activist and then worked as an adviser to Aung San Suu Kyi.



He returned to the stage two years ago, but after a military coup, he once again became a victim of being at the forefront of the anti-government movement.



His wife, Tajin, who is also a former singer and is participating in the resistance movement, accepted an interview with SBS with difficulty.



Enlarging an image


She is also on the run.



[Tajin Nuaung: (Answering the interview by voice) is because I do not want to reveal where I am.

Me too, and people with me could be at risk.]



Her husband hasn't been able to get even the slightest amount of legal assistance since he was arrested last November on charges of conspiring to attack the military.



[Tajin Nuaung: We are fighting the military for democracy.

We are not at fault.

The fault lies with the military.]



We still don't know where her husband's body is.



[Tajin Nuaung: There was no direct notification (about the execution).

I went to jail and asked him, and he said he wasn't there.

He said there was no body.]



Tajin, who had to spend her birthday alone for the first time after her marriage, said calmly that there was still work to be done.



[Tajin Nuaung: (In the last words I said) Even if one of them disappears, let the other one do this to the end (I remember that)] On my



husband's back is a tattoo with a map of Myanmar and a microphone on it. was engraved.



[People's Day Again: I wanted to express people's aspirations.

That's what it means to have a tattoo on his back.]



Mr. Tajin said that he is now trying to deliver that message on his behalf, and appealed for more active intervention from the international community.



(Video coverage: Kim Hak-mo, editing: Kim Kyung-yeon)