The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Smaller protests in Myanmar

Junta deploys more soldiers and armoured vehicles

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“We don’t want to live under a military dictatorsh­ip. We want to establish a real federal union where all citizens, all ethnicitie­s are treated equally.”

Esther Ze Naw

Protesters in Myanmar kept up demands on Monday for the release of ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and an end to military rule, though crowds were smaller after the junta deployed armoured vehicles and more soldiers on the streets.

Suu Kyi, detained since a Feb. 1 coup against her elected government, had been expected to face a court on Monday in connection with charges of illegally importing six walkie-talkie radios, but a judge said her remand lasted until Wednesday, her lawyer, Khin Maung Zaw, said.

The coup and arrest of Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi and others have sparked the biggest protests in Myanmar in more than a decade, with hundreds of thousands coming on to the streets to denounce the military’s derailment of a tentative transition to democracy.

“This is a fight for our future, the future of our country,” youth activist Esther Ze Naw said at a protest in the main city of Yangon. “We don’t want to live under a military dictatorsh­ip. We want to establish a real federal union where all citizens, all ethnicitie­s are treated equally.”

The unrest has revived memories in the Southeast Asian nation of bloody outbreaks of opposition to almost half a century of direct army rule that had ended in 2011, when the military began a process of withdrawin­g from civilian politics.

Violence this time has been limited, although police have opened fire on several occasions to disperse protesters. One woman who was hit by police fire in the capital Naypyitaw last week is not expected to survive.

On Monday, security forces used rubber bullets and catapults in the city of Mandalay, wounding two people lightly, media and residents said.

The government and army could not be reached for comment.

CIVIL DISOBEDIEN­CE

As well as the demonstrat­ions in towns and cities, the military is facing a strike by government workers, part of a civil disobedien­ce movement that is crippling many functions of government.

Armoured vehicles were deployed on Sunday in Yangon, the northern town of Myitkyina and Sittwe in the west, the first large-scale use of such vehicles since the coup.

More soldiers have also been spotted on the streets to help police who have been largely overseeing crowd control, including members of the 77th Light Infantry Division, a mobile force accused of brutality in campaigns against ethnic minority insurgents and protests in the past.

Crowds were smaller, though it was unclear if people were intimidate­d by the soldiers or fatigue was setting in after 12 days of demonstrat­ions.

“We can’t join the protests every day,” said a laid-off travel officer worker in Yangon who declined to be identified. “But we won’t back down.”

Earlier, more than a dozen police trucks with water cannon vehicles were deployed near the Sule Pagoda in Yangon, one of the city’s main demonstrat­ion sites.

Protesters also gathered outside the central bank, where they held signs calling for support for the civil disobedien­ce movement. An armoured vehicle and several trucks carrying soldiers were parked nearby.

Later, police sealed off the headquarte­rs of Suu Kyi’s party in Yangon shortly before protesters arrived and chanted slogans, a witness said.

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