Times of Suriname

Myanmar holds muted Martyrs’ Day tribute to fallen independen­ce heroes

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MYANMAR - Myanmar’s public marked one of the Southeast Asian nation’s darkest moments on Sunday with tributes to slain independen­ce heroes, though the annual Martyrs’ Day gatherings were muted by the coronaviru­s pandemic due to social distancing measures.

Flanked by senior government and military officials, state counselor Aung San Suu Kyi laid a wreath at a mausoleum dedicated to Aung San, her father and the country’s independen­ce hero, who was assassinat­ed alongside members of his cabinet on July 19, 1947. Crowds also laid flowers beside statues of Aung San, who remains a potent political force in the country, with his image used by his daughter and some of her rivals to garner support among a public that continues to revere him.

The former ruling military junta for years curtailed use of his image for fear it would help the democracy movement that emerged in 1988 led by Suu Kyi. In the commercial capital of Yangon on Sunday, crowds queued to approach a statue of Aung San clutching portraits of the independen­ce leader and his daughter, waiting on markers painted in the road to encourage people to keep a distance. “The Martyrs’ Day was once extinct, during the political crisis,” said Yin Yin Phyo Thu, as she laid flowers. “We young people are responsibl­e for preserving the image of Martyrs’ Day not to fade away during COVID-19,”

she said. Myanmar has reported 340 cases of COVID-19, the illness caused by the novel coronaviru­s. The country goes to the polls again in November in a vote that will serve as a test of the fledgling democracy. “We came here to pay respects and also to get ourselves politicall­y motivated in 2020, the election year,” said Kyaw Swar, a university student.

( Reuters )

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