Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Grave of a slain Myanmar protester disturbed: Report

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

YANGON: Guarded by police and soldiers, authoritie­s in Myanmar disturbed the grave of a 19-yearold woman who became an icon of the anti-coup protest movement after she was shot dead wearing a T-shirt that read “Everything will be OK”, a witness and local media said.

One witness said the body of Kyal Sin, widely known as Angel, was removed on Friday, examined and returned, before the tomb was resealed in Myanmar’s second city of Mandalay. The independen­t Mizzima news service reported the same.

A military spokesman did not answer calls seeking comment. Reuters was unable to contact police for comment.

State media on Friday questioned reports that the protester had been killed by security forces when they opened fire to disperse a demonstrat­ion on Wednesday and said the cause of death was being investigat­ed by “rule of law bodies”.

Pictures provided to Reuters by a resident who visited the grave on Saturday showed cement that was still drying as well as discarded rubber gloves and boots, surgical gowns and boots. One block appeared to be stained with blood.

A witness who lives near the graveyard said he had seen the grave opened using power tools on Friday evening by a team of at least 30 people that arrived with four cars and two police trucks as well as two trucks of soldiers for security.

“They pulled out the coffin and removed the body and placed it on a bench. They even placed a brick under the head,” said the witness, who declined to be named for fear of reprisals.

“Those who seemed to be doctors wearing the protective cover did something to the body, I think they were touching the head. They took a small piece from the body and showed it to each other,” he said. Reuters was unable to independen­tly confirm accounts of what happened.

Two other people told Reuters they were warned by locals not the enter the cemetery on Friday as police and military were inside unearthing Kyal Sin’s body.

Photograph­s of her body on Wednesday showed a bloody head wound.

 ?? AFP ?? The daughter of Zwee Htet Soe, a protester who died during a demonstrat­ion against the military coup on March 3, cries as she sees her father’s body in his coffin during his funeral in Yangon on March 5.
AFP The daughter of Zwee Htet Soe, a protester who died during a demonstrat­ion against the military coup on March 3, cries as she sees her father’s body in his coffin during his funeral in Yangon on March 5.

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