Hindustan Times (East UP)

Protests gather pace as junta shuts Facebook

- Agence France Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com AFP

YANGON: Myanmar’s generals ordered internet providers to restrict access to Facebook on Thursday, as UN chief Antonio Guterres said the world must rally to ensure the military coup fails.

The Southeast Asian nation was plunged back into direct military rule on Monday as de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other civilian leaders were detained in a series of dawn raids, ending the country’s experiment with democracy.

The coup sparked internatio­nal condemnati­on and fears the military will drag 54 million people back to the decades of junta rule that turned Myanmar into one of Asia’s most impoverish­ed and repressive nations.

With soldiers back on the streets of major cities, the takeover has so far not generated any mass pro-democracy street protests. But people have flocked to social media to voice opposition and share plans for civil disobedien­ceespecial­ly on Facebook.

“We have digital power... so we’ve been using this since day one to oppose the military junta,” said activist Thinzar Shunlei Yi, who’s behind a so-called “Civil Disobedien­ce Movement” fanning out across social media platforms.

Telenor, one of the country’s main telecoms providers, confirmed on Thursday that authoritie­s had ordered it to “temporaril­y block” Facebook access.

The Norwegian-owned company said it had to comply but “does not believe that the request is based on necessity and proportion­ality, in accordance with internatio­nal human rights law”.

Facebook confirmed access “is currently disrupted for some people” and urged authoritie­s to restore connectivi­ty.

NetBlocks, which monitors internet outages around the world, said the disruption­s were also affecting Facebook-owned apps such as Instagram and WhatsApp.

For many in Myanmar, Facebook is the gateway to the internet and a vital way to gather informatio­n. “The first thing we look at each morning is our phone, the last thing we look at in the night is our phone,” Aye, an entreprene­ur opposed to the coup, told AFP.

A small rally kicked off Thursday in front of Mandalay Medicine University, with protesters carrying signs that said “People’s protest against the military coup!” Local media said police arrested four people.

Meanwhile, 70 MPs from Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party signed a “pledge to serve the public” while staging their own symbolic parliament­ary session in Naypyidaw.

 ??  ?? A march by Burmese activists residing in Tel Aviv, Israel.
A march by Burmese activists residing in Tel Aviv, Israel.

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