Vicki Boman was detained with her husband, Myanmar national Htin Lin, on Wednesday night, according to local media and a person in Yangon with knowledge of the situation.
Myanmar’s military government has not announced the arrests. However, local news outlets The Irrawaddy, Myanmar Now and international news agency Reuters each reported that Bauman could be charged under the country’s immigration law.
The Irrawaddy newspaper reported that Bauman and Hein Lin are being held at Insein Prison in Yangon.
A spokesperson for the UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said on Thursday the British government was “concerned” about the arrest of a “British woman” in Myanmar.
“We are in contact with local authorities and provide consular assistance,” the spokesman said.
Bowman served as Britain’s top diplomat in Myanmar from 2002 to 2006, and has since remained in the country as founder of the nongovernmental organization Myanmar Center for Responsible Business.
The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Department said on Thursday measures were being taken to “target the military’s access to arms and revenue”.
Among the companies on the sanctions list are Star Sapphire Group of Companies, Gateways International Group of Companies and Sky One Construction.
The UK government has highlighted that the sanctions were imposed exactly five years after a series of brutal attacks by the Myanmar military on Rohingya communities living in the country’s Rakhine state.
The Muslim-majority Rohingya community in the Buddhist-majority state of Myanmar has suffered decades of persecution.
The UK government has also announced its intention to intervene in a legal case that will determine whether Myanmar violated its obligations under the United Nations Genocide Convention in relation to military actions against the Rohingya in 2016 and 2017.
“Our decision to intervene in the Gambia v Myanmar case and another round of sanctions sends a strong signal of our continued support to seek accountability for the atrocities committed in 2017 as well as restrict the junta’s access to funding and arms supply,” said UK Minister for Asia Amanda Milling.
Melling reiterated the UK’s condemnation of the “horrific campaign of ethnic cleansing waged by the Myanmar armed forces” five years after the campaign was launched.
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