Bangkok Post

Myanmar activists stage ‘bloody’ rally

Quiet marches mark 2nd day of New Year

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Opponents of military rule in Myanmar splashed the colour red on yesterday, the second day of the traditiona­l new year holiday, in the latest phase of their campaign to restore democracy.

Activists called for what they dubbed a bloody paint strike and people responded with red smeared on roads, on signs outside government offices and on T-shirts, according to pictures posted on social media.

Some people marched with signs calling for the release of the leader of the ousted government, Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. She has been detained since the Feb 1 coup on various charges including violating an official secrets act that could see her imprisoned for 14 years.

Her lawyers have denied the charges against her.

“Please save our leader — future — hope,” read a sign with a picture of Ms Suu Kyi held by a young woman marching in the second city of Mandalay, according to a picture published by the Mizzima news service.

The five-day New Year holiday, known as Thingyan, began on Tuesday but pro-democracy activists cancelled the usual festivitie­s, which include highspirit­ed water throwing in the streets, to focus on their campaign against the generals who seized power.

The military says the protests are petering out. Activists have planned different shows of defiance every day over the holiday, which ends on Saturday.

The coup has plunged Myanmar into crisis after 10 years of tentative steps toward democracy with daily protests and strikes by workers in many sectors that have brought the economy to a standstill.

The United Nations had said it feared that the military clampdown on the protests risked escalating into a civil conflict like that seen in Syria and appealed for a halt to the “slaughter”.

On Tuesday, the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet urged countries to take immediate action to push Myanmar’s military to stop its “campaign of repression and slaughter of its people.”

A Myanmar activist group, the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners, says the security forces have killed 710 protesters since the ouster of Ms Suu Kyi’s government.

Myanmar’s ethnic rebel groups in some lawless border territorie­s have stepped up attacks on the military and police, raising fears of a broader civil conflict.

The military has retaliated with air strikes, which the Free Burma Rangers — a Christian aid group working in the area — said have displaced more than 24,000 civilians in Karen state by Saturday.

The Rangers, which runs a health clinic in the state, said air strikes had killed at least 20 people and wounded over 40.

 ?? AFP ?? A protest sign appealing to the United Nations (UN) is seen on the ground in East Dagon township in Yangon yesterday.
AFP A protest sign appealing to the United Nations (UN) is seen on the ground in East Dagon township in Yangon yesterday.

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