The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Thousands defy junta in Myanmar as protests continue

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YANGON — Supporters of ousted Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi clashed with police on Friday as hundreds of thousands joined nationwide pro-democracy demonstrat­ions in defiance of the junta’s call to halt mass gatherings.

The United Nations human rights office said more than 350 people, including officials, activists and monks, have been arrested in Myanmar since the Feb. 1 military coup, including some who face criminal charges on

“dubious grounds.”

The UN rights investigat­or for Myanmar told a special session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva that there were “growing reports, photograph­ic evidence” that security forces have used live ammunition against protesters, in violation of internatio­nal law.

Special Rapporteur Thomas Andrews urged the UN Security Council to consider imposing sanctions and arms embargoes.

Myint Thu, Myanmar’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, told the session that Myanmar did not want “to stall the nascent democratic transition in the country,” and would continue internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

Friday’s mostly peaceful protests were the biggest so far, and came a day after Washington imposed sanctions on generals who led the takeover.

Three people were wounded when police fired rubber bullets to break up a crowd of tens of thousands in the southeaste­rn city of Mawlamyine, a Myanmar Red Cross official told Reuters.

Footage broadcast by Radio Free Asia showed police charging at protesters, grabbing one and smashing him in the head. Stones were then thrown at police before the shots were fired.

“Three got shot — one woman in the womb, one man on his cheek and one man on his arm,” said Myanmar Red Cross official Kyaw Myint, who witnessed the clash.

Several people in Mawlamyine were arrested but later released when a thousands-strong crowd stood outside the police station and demanded they be freed, according to live footage broadcast by Radio Free Asia.

Doctors have said they do not expect a 19-year-old woman shot during a protest in the capital Naypyitaw on Tuesday to survive. She was hit in the head with a live round fired by police, witnesses said.

In the biggest city, Yangon, on Friday, hundreds of doctors in white duty coats and scrubs marched past the golden Shwedagon pagoda, the country’s holiest Buddhist site, while in another part of town football fans wearing team kits marched with humorous placards denouncing the military.

Other demonstrat­ions took place in Naypyitaw, the coastal town of Dawei, and in Myitkyina, the capital of northern Kachin state, where young men played rap music and staged a dance-off.

Social media giant Facebook said it would cut the visibility of content run by Myanmar’s military, saying they had “continued to spread misinforma­tion” after seizing power.

The generals have sought to justify their takeover by saying there was fraud in an election last November won by Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD), a claim rejected by the country’s election committee.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Demonstrat­ors protest in front of the Chinese embassy against the military coup and to demand for the release of elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, in Yangon, Myanmar, on Friday.
REUTERS Demonstrat­ors protest in front of the Chinese embassy against the military coup and to demand for the release of elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, in Yangon, Myanmar, on Friday.

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