Miami Herald

Protesters rally across Myanmar, defying coup and risking crackdown

- BY HANNAH BEECH

People marched through Monywa, in the heart of Myanmar, and Mawlamyine, on the eastern coast, demanding an end to military rule. They refused to disperse in the casino town of Myawaddy, even when the police fired warning shots.

In Sagaing Division, in the foothills of the Himalayas, a man from the Naga ethnic group wearing a fur hat garnished with hornbill feathers and boar tusks raised his arm in a defiant salute. And in Yangon, the largest city in the country, columns of red-clad protesters surged toward Sule Pagoda from as far as the eye could see.

Nearly a week after the country’s generals staged a coup, detaining civilian leaders and catapultin­g Myanmar back to army rule, people are speaking up. By the hundreds of thousands on the weekend, they marched in cities and towns across the country. They carried red balloons and ribbons as well as the crimson flag, emblazoned with a white star and golden fighting peacock, of the ousted National League for Democracy party.

And they chanted in unison for the freedom, once again, of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, the civilian leader who spent 15 years under house arrest during the military’s nearly 50-year grip on power. For five years, Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy had led a civilian government that had received two decisive mandates from the electorate, even as the military retained much authority. The army coup Feb. 1 ended any illusion of power sharing.

In the past, the military has met rallies like these with guns, shooting Buddhist monks and student protesters alike. Its response already includes dozens of arrests and telecommun­ications outages that evoked the days of isolation under junta rule. But the memory of army massacres of prodemocra­cy protesters as recently as 2007 did not stop marchers from pouring onto the streets over the weekend.

“I don’t care if they shoot because under the military, our lives will be dead anyway,” said Ko Nyi Zaw, who joined a rally Sunday. “Before we die completely, we have to protest.”

Even in Naypyitaw, the capital that was purposebui­lt by the generals early this century, hundreds of motorcycle­s rolled across normally empty avenues, streaming National League for Democracy flags.

In the refugee camps in Bangladesh, where about 1 million Rohingya Muslims who fled army pogroms in Myanmar now shelter, people

joined the call for a restoratio­n of civilian government, even if Aung San Suu Kyi defended the military against accusation­s of genocide from internatio­nal prosecutor­s.

“They killed Rohingya, they tortured us, and we haven’t forgotten those brutal days,” said Abdur Rahim, who escaped from Myanmar and now lives in the Kutupalong camp in Bangladesh, the largest single refugee settlement in the world. “We express solidarity with those who are protesting against the military government in

Myanmar.”

The internet was severed in Myanmar on Saturday, just like during the coup, but was restored a day later. No one knew, though, when another outage might cut off the country again. In the hours when they could, protesters posted live videos on Facebook. Tens of millions of people offered their support online, a stream of hearts and likes for each city’s display of defiance.

On Saturday night, what sounded for a moment like gunfire crackled through the air in Yangon and the city of Mandalay, but the noise

turned out to be firecracke­rs. A rumor, emanating first from text messages among soldiers, radiated out into the population: Aung San Suu Kyi had been freed. People lit firecracke­rs in delight and sang protest anthems. But the rumor was just that, and perhaps even disinforma­tion.

On Sunday, some of the protesters said they thought the military had spread the false rumor about Aung San Suu Kyi’s release in order to stop people from coming out. They said the possibilit­y of such psychologi­cal warfare, during an internet blackout, had angered them.

“The military is spreading fake news about Daw Aung San Suu Kyi,” said Ma Maw Maw Tun, who marched Sunday. “I don’t accept that, and we will protest until the military dictatorsh­ip is gone and the civilian government returns.”

Over the weekend, the U.S. Embassy in Myanmar said on Twitter that it supported “the right of the people of Myanmar to protest in support of the democratic­ally elected government and their right to freely access informatio­n.”

“We repeat our calls for the military to relinquish power, restore the democratic­ally elected government, release those detained, lift all telecommun­ications restrictio­ns, and refrain from violence,” a second tweet said.

In Yangon, the street protests Sunday felt like a giant party, a release from the stress of a military putsch and also a moment to ignore the coronaviru­s pandemic through the first mass gathering in months.

But the specter of the military still loomed. Medics stood on guard, awaiting what they feared was to come. People monitored movements from military bases in case soldiers were seen heading toward the protests. Demonstrat­ors placed food, water and red roses in front of police officers in riot gear as a peace offering. Some knelt in obeisance.

Officials from the National League for Democracy said that as a party they did not want people on the streets. Instead, they urged a campaign of civil disobedien­ce, which has been growing with each day, too.

 ?? The New York Times ?? Protesters offer roses to police officers in Yangon, Myanmar on Saturday, nearly a week after the country’s generals staged a coup, detaining civilian leaders and catapultin­g Myanmar back to army rule. By the hundreds of thousands this weekend, residents marched in cities and towns across the country.
The New York Times Protesters offer roses to police officers in Yangon, Myanmar on Saturday, nearly a week after the country’s generals staged a coup, detaining civilian leaders and catapultin­g Myanmar back to army rule. By the hundreds of thousands this weekend, residents marched in cities and towns across the country.

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