Bangkok Post

Protesters mock junta leader

MYANMAR MARKS BIRTHDAY OF GENERAL WITH FLAMES AND FAKE COFFINS

-

>>YANGON: Protesters in coup-hit Myanmar marked the birthday of junta leader Min Aung Hlaing yesterday by burning his portrait and staging mock funerals.

The nation has experience­d mass protests and a brutal military response since the Feb 1 coup which ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Almost 890 civilians have died in a crackdown by the State Administra­tion Council — as the junta calls itself — and almost 6,500 have been arrested, according to a local monitoring group.

Yesterday, anti-coup demonstrat­ors posted pictures on social media of a traditiona­l noodle soup dish called mohinga, which is often served at funerals in Myanmar.

“I made (mohinga) on his birthday because I want him to die soon,” one Yangon resident told reporters.

“Many innocent people lost their lives because of him. So, if he died, the whole country would be happy.”

In Mandalay, the country’s second-largest city, some activists burnt pictures of the junta leader and set fire to fake coffins at mock funerals.

“Because of this man, our Myanmar has many problems,” a Mandalay resident told reporters.

“He actually should not have been born. Therefore, we hold his funeral as we want to say he should be dead.”

Min Aung Hlaing turned 65 yesterday — the age he would have been subject to mandatory retirement while he headed up the armed forces, as stipulated by the country’s 2008 constituti­on.

Some analysts believe that was a factor in his power-grab because he had not been able to see a path to higher office with the help of the military-backed political party, which was routed in an election last year.

Before the coup, Min Aung Hlaing was considered an internatio­nal pariah, condemned for presiding over the brutal 2017 crackdown on the country’s stateless Rohingya population.

He has been banned from Facebook for stoking hate speech against the persecuted minority.

UN investigat­ors have also called on him and other top army leaders to be prosecuted for genocide.

But for years, he has steadfastl­y denied nearly all allegation­s of human rights abuses and says the military operations, which drove around 750,000 Rohingya refugees into Bangladesh, were justified to root out insurgents.

He was tapped to lead Myanmar’s armed forces in 2011, just as a previous generation of military leaders was transition­ing the country to a parliament­ary system after decades of junta rule.

Min Aung Hlaing’s regime has faced internatio­nal condemnati­on and sanctions since the putsch, with concerns over mounting violence, political prisoners, internet shutdowns and a clawing back of press freedom.

His State Administra­tion Council yesterday insisted it was working on achieving “enduring peace for the entire nation”, according to a state-run newspaper.

 ??  ?? RISING UP: Protesters make the three-finger salute beside a banner featuring Myanmar armed forces chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing as they take part in a demonstrat­ion against the military coup in Yangon yesterday.
RISING UP: Protesters make the three-finger salute beside a banner featuring Myanmar armed forces chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing as they take part in a demonstrat­ion against the military coup in Yangon yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand