Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Burmese remain defiant over coup

Protests persist despite week’s tear gas, beatings, 50 deaths

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RANGOON, Burma — Security forces in Burma again used force Saturday to disperse anti-coup protesters, a day after a U.N. special envoy urged the Security Council to take action to quell junta violence that last week left more than 50 peaceful demonstrat­ors dead and scores injured.

Protests were reported Saturday morning in the country’s biggest city, Rangoon, where stun grenades and tear gas were used against demonstrat­ors. On Wednesday, 18 people were reported killed there.

Protests also took place in several other cities, including Mandalay, the second-biggest city, Myitkyina, the capital of the northern state of Kachin, Myeik in the far south, where police fired tear gas at students, and Dawei in the southeast, where tear gas also was used.

Demonstrat­ors in the city of Monywa poured cans of beer over their feet and those of passers-by to show their contempt for the brewery’s owners — the military. Myanmar Beer is one of a number of business concerns in the country that are linked to the generals and has seen its sales plummet in the weeks after the coup. It’s also lost its Japanese partner, Kirin, which announced that it was pulling out of the venture as a result of the power grab.

Burma is often called Myanmar, a name that ruling military authoritie­s adopted in 1989. Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other regime opponents have refused to adopt the name change, as have the U.S. and Britain.

Officials are believed to have exhumed the body of a woman who was killed during Wednesday’s suppressio­n of protests in Mandalay. The woman, Kyal Sin, had been photograph­ed taking part in the protests, and images of her on the front lines have made her a high-profile martyr.

Security forces Friday night sealed off the cemetery where she was buried, and when residents visited in the morning, her grave was freshly plastered over and shovels and other evidence of digging were found at the site. There was no official explanatio­n of the incident, but media outlets close to the military earlier reported that the authoritie­s had questioned the conclusion that she had been shot dead by police, and intended to investigat­e.

The escalation of violence has put pressure on the world community to act to restrain the junta, which seized power Feb. 1 by ousting the elected government of Suu Kyi. The coup reversed years of slow progress toward democracy in Burma, which for five decades had languished under strict military rule that led to internatio­nal isolation and sanctions.

Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party led a return to civilian rule with a landslide election victory in 2015, and with an even greater margin of votes last year. It would have been installed for a second five-year term last month, but instead Suu Kyi and President Win Myint and other members of the government were placed in military detention.

Large protests have occurred daily across many cities and towns, and security forces have responded with greater use of lethal force and mass arrests. At least 18 protesters were shot and killed last Sunday and 38 on Wednesday, according to the U.N. Human Rights Office. More than 1,000 have been arrested, the independen­t Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners said.

U.N. special envoy Christine Schraner Burgener said in her briefing to Friday’s closed Security Council meeting that council unity and “robust” action are critical “in pushing for a stop to the violence and the restoratio­n of Myanmar’s democratic institutio­ns.”

“We must denounce the actions by the military,” she said. “It is critical that this council is resolute and coherent in putting the security forces on notice and standing with the people of Myanmar firmly, in support of the clear November election results.”

She reiterated an appeal to the internatio­nal community not to “lend legitimacy or recognitio­n to this regime that has been forcefully imposed, and nothing but chaos has since followed.”

The Security Council took no immediate action. Council diplomats said Britain circulated a draft presidenti­al statement for considerat­ion, a step below a legally binding resolution.

Any kind of coordinate­d action at the U.N. will be difficult because two permanent members of the Security Council, China and Russia, are likely to veto it.

Earlier in the week, Schraner Burgener warned Burma’s army that the world’s nations and the Security Council “might take huge, strong measures.”

“And the answer was, ‘We are used to sanctions, and we survived those sanctions in the past,’” she said. When she warned that Burma would become isolated, Schraner Burgener said “the answer was, ‘We have to learn to walk with only a few friends.’”

 ?? (AP) ?? Anti-coup protesters march Saturday in Mandalay, Burma. Protests and clashes with security forces occurred in several cities around the country Saturday.
(AP) Anti-coup protesters march Saturday in Mandalay, Burma. Protests and clashes with security forces occurred in several cities around the country Saturday.

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