Gulf Today

Myanmar suspends thousands of academics, educationa­l staff

Students and teachers are at the forefront of opposition during nearly half a century of military rule; Suu Kyi is expected to atend her next court hearing in person, says lawyer

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More than 11,000 academics and other university staff opposed to Myanmar’s ruling junta have been suspended ater going on strike in protest against military rule, a teachers’ group said.

The suspension­s come as the resumption of universiti­es ater a year closed due to the coronaviru­s epidemic prompts a new confrontat­ion between the army and the staff and students who are calling for boycots over the Feb.1 coup.

“I feel upset to give up a job that I adored so much, but I feel proud to stand against injustice,” said one 37-year-old university rector, who gave her name only as Thandar for fear of reprisals.

“My department summoned me today. I’m not going. We shouldn’t follow the orders of the military council.”

A professor on a fellowship in the United States said she was told she would have to declare opposition to the strikes or lose her job. Her university authoritie­s had told her every scholar would be tracked down and forced to choose, she said.

As of Monday, more than 11,100 academic and other staff had been suspended from colleges and universiti­es offering degrees, an official of the Myanmar Teachers’ Federation told reporters, declining to be identified for fear of reprisals.

Reuters was not immediatel­y able to ascertain exactly what proportion of total staff that figure represents. Myanmar had more than 26,000 teachers in universiti­es and other tertiary education institutio­ns in 2018, according to the most recent World Bank data.

Students and teachers were at the forefront of opposition during nearly half a century of military rule and have been prominent in the protests since the army detained elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and halted a decade of tentative democratic reforms.

Many teachers, like medics and other government workers, have stopped work as part of a civil disobedien­ce movement that has paralysed Myanmar. As protests flared ater the coup, security forces occupied campuses in the biggest city, Yangon, and elsewhere.

A spokesman for the junta did not respond to phone calls seeking comment on the suspension­s. The junta-controlled Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper said teachers and students should co-operate to get the education system started again.

“Political opportunis­ts do not wish to see such developmen­t by commiting sabotage acts,” it said.

It was not clear to what extent the 11,000 staff suspension­s would hamper efforts to reopen colleges but many students are also boycoting classes. At the public West Yangon Technologi­cal University, the student’s union published a list of 180 staff who had been suspended to hail them as heroes.

“I don’t feel sad to miss school,” said 22-yearold Hnin, a student of the Yangon University of Education. “There’s nothing to lose from missing the junta’s education.”

Zaw Wai Soe, education minister in a rival National Unity Government set up undergroun­d by opponents of the junta, said he was touched that students had told him they would only return “when the revolution prevails.”

Doubts have also been raised over the return to school of younger students, with institutio­ns now taking registrati­ons for the start of a new year. There are nearly 10 million school students in the country of 53 million.

Suu Kyi is expected to atend her next court hearing in person, her chief lawyer said on Monday, ater weeks of stalled virtual proceeding­s over charges her supporters say are fabricated.

“The presiding judge declared that by the instructio­n of the Union Supreme Court, the cases were to be heard in person, not virtually by video conferenci­ng,” her legal team head, Khin Maung Zaw, said in a text message, referring to Monday’s hearing.

He said the judge “told us that the problem will eventually be solved,” and that Suu Kyi asked what the judge meant by “eventually.”

Suu Kyi, 75, has been permited to speak with lawyers only via a video link in the presence of security personnel. Her co-defendant is Win Myint, the ousted president.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Protesters take part in a demonstrat­ion against the military coup in Dawei on Monday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Protesters take part in a demonstrat­ion against the military coup in Dawei on Monday.

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