Police in attack on students to end protest
HUNDREDS of police and hired thugs charged at students in Burma protesting over a new education law, pummelling them with batons and then dragging them into trucks, ending a week-long stand-off.
Witnesses said many of the demonstrators suffered injuries, some to the head. Police also chased after journalists, scattering them.
The protesters began their sit-in just over a week ago near a monastery in Letpadan after police barred them from marching to Rangoon, 90 miles to the south.
The demonstrators want the government to scrap a newly-passed education law that they say curbs academic freedom.
Earlier, the two sides had appeared close to reaching an agreement.
Authorities said the students could march to a nearby town and then be transported to Rangoon in government-provided trucks, but when they demanded that the protesters refrain from shouting slogans or waving flags on the way, tensions again soared.
More than 400 police formed human chains to block the road. The protesters tried to push their way through.
The police and hired thugs then turned on the students, chasing after them with batons and sticks.
Witnesses said some protesters were beaten over the head, punched and kicked as they were dragged to the waiting trucks.
Several protesters were arrested, including one student leader, Min Thwe Thit.
Another student leader contacted by phone, Honey Oo, said police chased the protesters into the monastery, beat them and then dragged them away.
“Many have been beaten and some have been arrested, including many female students,” Honey Oo said.
The scenes area reminder of Burma’s authoritarian militaryrun past, from which the country began to emerge four years ago.