Myanmar remembers storied uprising
YANGON: Students and former activists in Myanmar marked the 30th anniversary of the famed 1988 pro-democracy uprising with a rousing but low-key ceremony, the culmination of three days of events to commemorate the revolt and its brutal suppression. Some 2,000 people packed the Yangon University recreation centre, which was festooned with red flags sporting the “fighting peacock” logo of the movement that helped catapult Aung San Suu Kyi to prominence.
They crammed past exhibitions of photos and paintings, wrote messages of support on a mock prison cell wall, and took turns waiting for a photo next to a sculpture of a symbolic clenched fist. Former protest leaders mounted the stage to reflect on the struggle against the military that first seized power in a 1962 coup. “After 30 years, we students have come back here again,” Min Ko Naing, one of the more prominent protest leaders, told the crowd to applause. “But some aren’t able to come back.” After years of economic decline and a tightening clampdown on rights, student-led protests swelled into nationwide strikes and marches on August 8, 1988. But troops rushed in to stamp out the movement, shooting protesters and locking them up en masse. The number of political prisoners in Myanmar’s fetid jails swelled while many fled the country into prolonged exile.
During the uprising, Suu Kyi — the daughter of independence hero General Aung San who had returned from England to care for her sick mother — was seen as a beacon of hope, giving rousing speeches to adoring crowds and maddening the paranoid junta. She was placed under house arrest for a combined total of 15 years before being released in 2010 and leading her National League for Democracy (NLD) party to victory in historic 2015 elections. But her reputation as a global icon for rights has been shattered due to her handling of the country’s Rohingya crisis. — AFP