Toronto Star

Police crack down on Myanmar protests

Woman shot, dozens arrested as regime looks to quell anti-coup voice

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YANGON, MYANMAR—Police in Myanmar escalated their crackdown on demonstrat­ors against this month’s military takeover, deploying early and in force on Saturday as protesters sought to assemble in the country’s two biggest cities and elsewhere.

Security forces in some areas appeared to become more aggressive in using force and making arrests, utilizing more plaincloth­es officers than had previously revealed themselves. Photos posted on social media showed that residents of at least two cities, Yangon and Monywa, resisted by erecting makeshift street barricades to try to hinder the advance of the police.

Myanmar’s crisis took a dramatic turn on the internatio­nal stage at a special session of the United Nations General Assembly on Friday when the country’s UN ambassador declared his loyalty to the ousted civilian government of Aung San Suu Kyi and called on the world to pressure the military to cede power.

There were arrests Saturday in Myanmar’s two biggest cities, Yangon and Mandalay, where demonstrat­ors have been hitting the streets daily to peacefully demand the restoratio­n of the government of Suu Kyi, whose National League for Democracy party won a landslide election victory in November. Police have increasing­ly been enforcing an order by the junta banning gatherings of five or more people.

Many other cities and towns have also hosted large protests against the Feb. 1 coup. Police in Dawei, in the southeast, and Monywa, 135 kilometres northwest of Mandalay, used force against protesters. Both cities, with population­s of less than 200,000 each, have been seeing large demonstrat­ions.

Social media carried unconfirme­d reports of a protester shot dead in Monywa. The reports could not immediatel­y be independen­tly confirmed, but appeared credible, with both photos and identifica­tion of the victim, though later accounts said the woman had not died. The reports from Monywa also said dozens or more people were arrested.

The military takeover reversed years of slow progress toward democracy after five decades of military rule. Suu Kyi’s party would have been installed for a second five-year term in office, but the army blocked parliament from convening and detained her and President Win Myint, as well as other top members of her government.

At the General Assembly in New York, Myanmar’s UN ambassador, Kyaw Moe Tun, declared in an emotional speech to fellow delegates that he represente­d Suu Kyi’s “civilian government elected by the people” and supported the fight against military rule.

MRTV, a Myanmar state-run television channel, broadcast an announceme­nt Saturday from the Foreign Ministry that Tun has been dismissed from his post because he had abused his power and misbehaved by failing to follow the instructio­ns of the government and betraying it. The ambassador flashed a three-finger salute that has been adopted by the civil disobedien­ce movement at the end of his speech in which he addressed people back home in Burmese.

In Yangon on Saturday morning, police began arrests early at the Hledan Centre intersecti­on, which has become the gathering point for protesters who then fan out to other parts of the city. Police took similar action in residentia­l neighbourh­oods. Security forces also tried to thwart protests in Mandalay, where roadblocks were set up at several key intersecti­ons and the regular venues for rallies were flooded with police.

Buddhist monks were prominent in Saturday’s march in Mandalay, as they have been regularly, lending moral authority to the civil disobedien­ce movement that is challengin­g the military rulers.

 ?? HKUN LAT GETTY IMAGES ?? Riot police arrest anti-coup protesters in Yangon on Saturday as Myanmar’s military government intensifie­d a crackdown on demonstrat­ors in recent days.
HKUN LAT GETTY IMAGES Riot police arrest anti-coup protesters in Yangon on Saturday as Myanmar’s military government intensifie­d a crackdown on demonstrat­ors in recent days.

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