Cape Breton Post

Myanmar’s anti-coup activists cancel new year festivitie­s

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Opponents of military rule in Myanmar cancelled traditiona­l new year festivitie­s on Tuesday and instead showed their anger with the generals who seized power through low-key displays of defiance and small protests across the country.

The United Nations human rights office said it feared that the military clampdown on protests since the Feb. 1 coup risked escalating into a civil conflict like that seen in Syria and appealed for a halt to the “slaughter.”

A Myanmar activist group, the Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners, says the security forces have killed 710 protesters since the ouster of an elected government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

Protesters were out again on the first day of the five-day New Year holiday, known as Thingyan, which is usually celebrated with prayers, ritual cleaning of Buddha images in temples and high-spirited waterdousi­ng on the streets.

“We do not celebrate Myanmar Thingyan this year since over 700 of our innocent brave souls have been killed,” said one Twitter user named Shwe Ei.

Women wearing fine clothes for the most important holiday of the year protested in several towns, holding traditiona­l pots containing seven flowers and sprigs that are displayed at this time, media pictures showed.

Many people painted the protesters’ three-finger salute on their Thingyan pots.

“People’s power, our power,” women marching on a street in the main city of Yangon chanted as passersby clapped, video posted by the Myanmar Now media group showed.

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