Bangkok Post

Protesters rally after raids

Local leader ‘faced harsh interrogat­ion’

- YANGON:

Thousands of Myanmar anti-coup demonstrat­ors defied a continued military crackdown yesterday, following overnight raids in Yangon in which an official from Aung San Suu Kyi’s party was beaten to death and several others were detained.

Myanmar has been in chaos since a Feb 1 coup which ousted civilian leader Ms Suu Kyi from power and triggered a mass uprising opposed to the new military junta.

Wednesday was the deadliest day so far, with the United Nations saying at least 38 people were killed as security forces fired into crowds, shooting some protesters in the head.

The UN rights office also said it has verified at least 54 deaths since the coup — though the actual number could be far higher — and more than 1,700 people have been detained.

National League for Democracy party official Soe Win confirmed some officials were arrested in overnight police operations but the exact number is not known.

At least one community leader connected to the ousted NLD government, 58-year-old Khin Maung Latt, was killed during a raid at Pabedan township in Yangon, Tun Kyi, from the Former Political Prisoners Society, said.

“He was beaten and taken in a raid since last night and it seems he underwent a harsh interrogat­ion,” he told AFP. “The dead body is being taken from Mingaladon military hospital and on the way Yay Way, cemetery.”

NLD MP Sithu Maung posted on Facebook that security forces last night were also searching for the party’s informatio­n officer Maung Maung but couldn’t find him.

“Maung Maung’s brother was beaten by police and soldiers and his body was held in an upside-down position while he was tortured because there was no one to arrest,” the MP said.

State-run media yesterday warned ousted lawmakers involved in a group called the Committee Representi­ng Pyidaungsu Hluttaw — which is claiming to be the legitimate elected government — that they are committing “high treason” and could be sentenced to death or 22 years jail.

The junta has declared group members personae non-grata (person not welcome) and says those who communicat­e with them could face seven years prison.

Rallies fanned out across the country with more than seven separate demonstrat­ions in Yangon and at least five in other cities and regional towns, according to Facebook live feeds.

The only reports of serious injuries were a 19-year-old man shot in the jaw and a woman, 56, hit by a rubber bullet in Bagan, the Unesco World Heritage Site famed for its ancient Buddhist temples.

“One woman was shot with a rubber bullet in her left leg,” a rescue team member told AFP, requesting anonymity.

Security forces opened fire near the ancient city at about 9am local time.

“There was one [19-year-old] man who was shot through the jaw and neck in Bagan,” Ko Ko, a member of the Bagan rescue team, told AFP.

Yangon-based activist Maung Saungkha said coordinate­d protests across multiple cities and areas were part of a two-day general strike.

“We are willing to die for our country,” he told AFP. “This current situation is worse [than the past regime]. So do we stay under this condition or do we fight? This time we must fight to win.”

A state-run newspaper yesterday warned people not to join the rallies.

“The public should be careful not to get involved in the protests to prevent the future of their children being ruined,” the Global New Light of Myanmar said.

The junta also warned civil servants that if they continued to boycott work, “they will be fired” with immediate effect from today.

In Yangon’s North Okkalapa township, protesting took on a musical flavour yesterday with guitarists, drummers and vocalists singing revolution­ary songs at an impromptu concert.

There was also a large turnout in Mandalay — Myanmar’s second biggest city — where security forces used tear gas as demonstrat­ors chanted: “don’t serve the military”.

Scores of monks in saffron robes also staged a sit down protest in the city, with signs saying “we don’t want a military junta”.

That city lost another life on Saturday, according to the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners, which reported that 21-year-old man had died after being shot in the leg and beaten by forces the previous day.

 ??  ?? People attend a funeral of U Khin Maung Latt, 58, an NLD ward chairman in Yangon yesterday. REUTERS
People attend a funeral of U Khin Maung Latt, 58, an NLD ward chairman in Yangon yesterday. REUTERS

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