Antelope Valley Press

Myanmar executions ignite global outrage

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BANGKOK (AP) — Internatio­nal outrage over Myanmar’s execution of four political prisoners intensifie­d, Tuesday, with grassroots protests and strong condemnati­on from world government­s, as well as fears the hangings could derail nascent attempts to bring an end to the violence and unrest that has beset the Southeast Asian nation since the military seized power, last year.

Myanmar’s military-led government that seized power from elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, in February 2021, has been accused of thousands of extrajudic­ial killings since then, but the hangings announced, Monday, were the country’s first official executions in decades.

“We feel that this is a crime against humanity,” said Malaysian Foreign Minister Saifuddin Abdullah, speaking at the side of the United Nations’ Special Envoy on Myanmar Noeleen Heyzer at a press conference in Kuala Lumpur.

He said the executions would be a focus of the upcoming meetings of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations foreign ministers, which begin in Cambodia, in a week.

Myanmar is a member of the influentia­l ASEAN group, which has been trying to implement a five-point consensus it reached on Myanmar last year calling for dialogue among all concerned parties, provision of humanitari­an assistance, an immediate cessation of violence and a visit by a special envoy to meet all parties.

With the executions, he said, “we look at it as if the junta is making a mockery of the five point process.”

Heyzer said that the UN sees the executions as a “blatant violation” of a person’s “right to life, liberty and security.”

In Bangkok, hundreds of pro-democracy demonstrat­ors protested outside neighborin­g Myanmar’s embassy, waving flags and chanting slogans amid a heavy downpour.

“The dictators used their power arbitraril­y,” yelled a young man through a bullhorn to the crowd, some of whom waved pictures of Suu Kyi or the four executed men. “We can’t tolerate this any more.”

Myanmar’s government spokespers­on, Maj. Gen. Zaw Min Tun, firmly rejected the criticism, saying the executions were carried out in line with the country’s law and not for “personal” reasons.

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