The Pak Banker

Strike grips Myanmar, anti-coup protesters defy junta's warning

-

Myanmar police began to disperse pro-democracy protesters on Monday as businesses around the country shut in a general strike called to oppose the military coup despite a threat from authoritie­s that confrontat­ion could cost lives.

Three weeks after seizing power, the junta has failed to stop daily protests and a civil disobedien­ce movement calling for the reversal of the Feb. 1 coup and release of elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

There were protests in cities and towns across the country on Monday, from the northern hills on the border with China to the central plains, the Irrawaddy river delta and the southern tip of the panhandle, images on social media showed. In the capital, Naypyitaw, where the military is headquarte­red, a police water cannon truck and numerous other vehicles closed in to break up a procession of chanting protesters who scattered when police on foot chased them, wrestling several to the ground.

"They're chasing and arresting us. We're just protesting peacefully," one woman said in video clip posted on Facebook. The response of security forces this time has been less deadly than in crackdowns in earlier phases of turmoil in almost half a century of military rule but three protesters have been killed - two shot dead in Mandalay on Saturday, and the first, a woman shot in Naypyitaw, who died on Friday.

The army has said one policeman died of injuries sustained in the protests. Late on Sunday, stateowned media MRTV warned that protesters they could get killed.

"Protesters are now inciting the people, especially emotional teenagers and youths, to a confrontat­ion path where they will suffer loss of life," the broadcaste­r said. Facebook said on Monday it had removed MRTV's pages for repeated violations of its standards, including its violence and incitement policy. On Sunday, it deleted the military's main page for the same reason. The junta's warning didn't discourage people from turning out in their tens of thousands.

In a country where dates are seen as auspicious, protesters noted the significan­ce of the date 22.2.2021, comparing it with demonstrat­ions on Aug. 8, 1988, when a previous generation staged anti-military protests that were bloodily suppressed. "Everyone is joining this," said San San Maw, 46, at the Hledan junction in the main city of Yangon, which has become a rallying point for the protests. "We need to come out."

Police later lined up, apparently in preparatio­n to disperse protesters from another site in Yangon, outside a U.N. office, a Facebook feed from the Eleven media outlet showed. Speaking earlier, Htet Htet Hlaing, 22, said she was scared and had prayed before joining the demonstrat­ion, but would not be discourage­d.

"We don't want the junta, we want democracy. We want to create our own future," she said. Author and historian Thant Myint-U said the window for a peaceful resolution was closing. "The outcome of the coming weeks will be determined by just two things: the will of an army that's crushed many protests before and the courage, skill and determinat­ion of the protesters (much of society)," he said on Twitter.

As well as local stores, internatio­nal chains announced closures on Monday, including Yum Brands Inc.'s KFC and delivery service Food Panda, owned by Delivery Hero. Southeast Asian company Grab stopped delivery services too, but left its taxis running.

Authoritie­s were "exercising utmost restraint", the foreign ministry said in a statement. It rebuked some countries for remarks it described as flagrant interferen­ce in Myanmar's internal affairs.

Several Western countries have condemned the coup and decried the violence against protesters. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Twitter the United States would continue to "take firm action" against authoritie­s violently cracking down on opponents of the coup in the Southeast Asian country that is also known as Burma. "We stand with the people of Burma," he said.

Britain, Germany, Japan and Singapore have also condemned the violence, while U.N. SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres again urged Myanmar's military to halt repression immediatel­y.

 ??  ?? YANGON
Pro-democracy protesters stage a sit-in as businesses around Myanmar closed during a general strike against military coup.
-REUTERS
YANGON Pro-democracy protesters stage a sit-in as businesses around Myanmar closed during a general strike against military coup. -REUTERS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan