New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Report: Myanmar forces fire on funeral; crackdown continues

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YANGON, Myanmar — Myanmar security forces opened fire Sunday on a crowd attending the funeral of a student who was killed on the bloodiest day yet of a crackdown on protests against last month’s coup, local media reported.

The escalating violence — which took the lives of at least 114 people Saturday, including several children under 16 — has prompted a U.N. human rights expert to accuse the junta of committing “mass murder” and to criticize the internatio­nal community for not doing enough to stop it.

But it has not so far stopped either the demonstrat­ions against the Feb. 1 takeover — or the violent response of the military and police to them. Local outlet Myanmar Now reported that the junta’s troops shot at mourners at the funeral in the city of Bago for Thae Maung Maung, a 20-year-old killed on Saturday. He was reportedly a member of the All Burma Federation of Student Union, which has a long history of supporting pro-democracy movements in the country.

According to the report, several people attending the funeral were arrested. It did not say if anyone was hurt or killed. But at least nine people were killed elsewhere Sunday as the crackdown continued, according to the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners, which has been tallying deaths during demonstrat­ions against the coup.

Some of the funerals held Sunday became themselves opportunit­ies to demonstrat­e resistance to the junta.

At one in Bhamo in the northern state of Kachin, a large crowd chanted democracy slogans and raised the three-finger salute that has come to symbolize defiance of the takeover. Family and friends were paying their respects to Shwe Myint, a 36year-old who was shot dead by security forces on Saturday.

The military had initially seized her body and refused to return it until her family signed a statement that her death was not caused by them, according to the Democratic Voice of Burma, a broadcast and online news service.

In Yangon, the country’s largest city, meanwhile, mourners flashed the threefinge­r salute as they wheeled the coffin of a 13-year-old boy.

Sai Wai Yan was shot dead by security forces as he played outside his home.

The Feb. 1 coup that ousted Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government reversed years of progress toward democracy after five decades of military rule. It has again made Myanmar the focus of internatio­nal scrutiny as security forces have repeatedly fired into crowds of protesters. At least 459 people have been killed since the takeover, according to the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners. The crackdown extends beyond the demonstrat­ions: Humanitari­an workers reported that the military had carried out airstrikes Sunday against guerilla fighters in the eastern part of the country.

The junta has accused some of the demonstrat­ors of perpetrati­ng the violence because of their sporadic use of Molotov cocktails and has said its use of force has been justified to stop what it has called rioting. While protesters have occasional­ly hurled firecracke­rs at troops and on Saturday carried bows and arrows, they remain vastly out-gunned.

Saturday’s death toll far exceeded the previous single-day high that ranged from 74 to 90 on March 14. The killings happened throughout the country as Myanmar’s military celebrated the annual Armed Forces Day holiday with a parade in the country’s capital, Naypyitaw.

 ?? AFP via Getty Images ?? This handout photo taken and released by Dawei Watch on Sunday shows protesters making the three-finger salute in memory of a comrade, who was shot dead the day before during a crackdown by security forces on demonstrat­ions against the military coup, in Kawthaung in southern Myanmar.
AFP via Getty Images This handout photo taken and released by Dawei Watch on Sunday shows protesters making the three-finger salute in memory of a comrade, who was shot dead the day before during a crackdown by security forces on demonstrat­ions against the military coup, in Kawthaung in southern Myanmar.

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