The Jerusalem Post

Myanmar protesters defy military as regional nations prepare to talk

-

Demonstrat­ors in Myanmar held protests demanding the restoratio­n of Aung San Suu Kyi’s government on Monday and called for more coordinate­d nationwide dissent against the military junta, as regional nations prepared for talks on the crisis.

Six people were killed over the weekend, according to activists, as police and soldiers forcefully broke up demonstrat­ions that some protesters are calling a “spring revolution.”

At least 564 people, including 47 children, have been killed by security forces during protests against the February 1 coup, an activist group has said. The movement has included street marches, a civil-disobedien­ce campaign of strikes and quirky acts of rebellion organized on social media.

Activists called for a nationwide clap later on Monday in appreciati­on of ethnic-minority armed groups that have are supporting the democratic cause and young demonstrat­ors who have been at the vanguard of protests, trying to shield or rescue people wounded by security forces.

“Lets clap for five minutes on April 5, 5 p.m. (1030 GMT) to honor Ethnic Armed Organisati­ons and Gen Z defense youths from Myanmar including Yangon who are fighting in the revolution... on behalf of us,” Ei Thinzar Maung, a protest leader, posted on Facebook.

Besides the brutal crackdown on street protests, the junta has sought to suppress the campaign by shutting down wireless broadband and mobile data services.

Brunei, the chair of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries, threw its support on Monday behind a regional leaders’ meeting to discuss developmen­ts in Myanmar and said it has asked officials to prepare for a meeting of the 10-nation bloc in Jakarta.

Following talks between Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin and Brunei Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, Brunei said both countries have asked their ministers and senior officials to undertake “necessary preparatio­ns for the meeting that will be held at the ASEAN Secretaria­t in Jakarta, Indonesia.”

No date was given. ASEAN operates by consensus, but the divergent views of its members on how to respond to the Myanmar army’s use of lethal force against civilians and the group’s policy of noninterfe­rence has limited its ability to act.

Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippine­s and Singapore have all expressed alarm over the killings of demonstrat­ors and support an urgent high-level meeting on Myanmar.

Besides Brunei, the other members include Myanmar,

Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia.

Earlier on Monday, demonstrat­ors with placards of Suu Kyi and signs asking for internatio­nal interventi­on marched through the streets of Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-biggest city, images posted on social media showed.

Vietnam

JUNTA REBUTS UN ENVOY

Comments by UN Special Envoy Christine Schraner Burgener of an impending “bloodbath” in Myanmar were inaccurate and misleading, the junta said.

“Ms. Burgener’s remarks contravene the basic principles of sovereignt­y, and the fact that the United Nations is meant to work towards peace and stability of the world’s nations,” it said in a notice published in the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper.

The council must consider “potentiall­y significan­t action” to reverse the course of events as “a bloodbath is imminent,” Schraner Burgener told a closed session of the 15-member Security Council on March 31, according to comments published by UN News.

The junta said the remarks were “a far cry from reality and could delay and destabiliz­e the efforts by the State Administra­tion Council to establish a genuine and discipline­d multiparty democracy.”

The coup and crackdown on demonstrat­ions has caused an internatio­nal outcry, prompting Western sanctions on the military and its lucrative businesses.

A conservati­ve forecast for Myanmar’s economy would be a 20% contractio­n in the fiscal year that started in October, instead of the 2% seen before the coup, Fitch Solutions said Monday.

External pressure is growing on the military to stop the killings, with some countries calling for it to cede power and free all detainees and others urging dialog and new elections soon.

A total of 2,667 people have been detained under the junta, the Associatio­n for Political Prisoners activist group said Monday.

Over the weekend, the junta announced arrest warrants for about 60 celebritie­s, social-media influencer­s, models and musicians on charges of incitement.

The military, which ruled with an iron first for half a century until 2011, has seen hostilitie­s with armed ethnic minorities reignite on at least two fronts, raising fears of growing conflict and chaos in the country.

The Karen National Union, which signed a ceasefire in 2012, has suffered the first military air strikes on its forces in more than 20 years, resulting in thousands of refugees pouring into Thailand. Fighting has also raged between the army and ethnic Kachin insurgents in the north. (Reuters)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel