New Straits Times

Myanmar protester shot dead, two more Aussies detained

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YANGON: Security forces in Myanmar shot dead an anti-coup protester yesterday, as the Australian government confirmed it is assisting two nationals who were detained after trying to leave here.

Myanmar has been in turmoil since soldiers ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi last month, triggering nationwide protests demanding a return to democracy.

Security forces have responded with lethal force, using live rounds along with tear gas and rubber bullets in an effort to bring the demonstrat­ions to heel.

One man was killed yesterday in the central city of Monywa and at least two people were injured in a clash with security forces at barricades, two witnesses said.

“I saw people carrying a man who was shot and killed,” a local resident said, adding that the body was taken to a hospital.

“They used stun grenades and tear gas... later they started shooting. I don’t know if the man, who died on the spot after he was hit on his head, was killed from rubber bullets or live rounds.”

Australia’s Foreign Ministry confirmed yesterday it was providing consular assistance to two of its nationals in Myanmar.

“Due to our privacy obligation­s we will not provide further detail,” a spokesman said.

It is understood business consultant­s Matthew O’Kane and Christa Avery, a dual CanadianAu­stralian citizen, are under house arrest after trying to leave the country on a relief flight on Friday.

The couple run a bespoke consultanc­y business here.

A third Australian, economist Sean Turnell, an adviser to Suu Kyi, who was arrested a week after the putsch, also remains in custody.

Weekend violence failed to deter hundreds of doctors and nurses donning hard hats and brandishin­g posters of Suu Kyi as they marched at dawn through Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-largest city and cultural capital.

Mandalay has been the scene of some of the worst violence from police and soldiers since the coup and local media said the rally was staged at dawn to evade security forces.

The protests came a day after a local monitoring group confirmed the killing of four protesters at the hands of security forces around the country.

Two of the deaths were in Yangon, the country’s commercial hub, according to the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Medical staff and students taking part in an early morning protest against the military coup and crackdown by security forces on demonstrat­ions, in Mandalay yesterday.
AFP PIC Medical staff and students taking part in an early morning protest against the military coup and crackdown by security forces on demonstrat­ions, in Mandalay yesterday.

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