The Reporter (Vacaville)

Myanmar death toll mounts amid protests, military crackdown

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Security forces in central Myanmar opened fire on anticoup protesters on Saturday, killing at least two people, according to local media. A human rights group said mounting violence since the Feb. 1 military takeover has killed at least 550 civilians.

Of those, 46 were children, according to Myanmar’s Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners. Some 2,751 people have been detained or sentenced, the group said.

Threats of lethal violence and arrests of protesters have failed to suppress daily demonstrat­ions across Myanmar demanding the military step down and reinstate the democratic­ally elected government. The coup reversed years of slow progress toward democracy in the Southeast Asian country.

The Myanmar Now news service reported government forces fired at demonstrat­ors in Monywa city, killing at least two people. One video posted on social media showed a group of protesters carrying away a young man with what appeared

to be a serious head wound, as gunfire sounded. His condition wasn’t immediatel­y known.

At least seven people were injured in the shooting, two of whom sustained severe wounds and were taken into custody by soldiers, Myanmar Now said, citing a member of a local rescue team.

Late Friday, armed plaincloth­es police took five people into custody after they spoke with a CNN reporter in a market in Yangon, the country’s largest city, local media reported citing witnesses. The arrests occurred

in three separate incidents.

Two women reportedly shouted for help as they were being arrested, Myanmar Now reported. One police officer, who was carrying a gun, asked if “anyone dared to help them,” a witness told the news service.

“They pointed their pistols at everyone — at passersby and at people in the store,” a witness said of two police officers, who forcibly took away two other women in the market.

Meanwhile, the Karen National Union representi­ng the ethnic minority rebel group that has been fighting the government for decades condemned “non-stop bombings and airstrikes” against villages and “unarmed civilians” in their homeland along the border with Thailand.

“The attacks have caused the death of many people including children and students, and the destructio­n of schools, residentia­l homes, and villages. These terrorist acts are clearly a flagrant violation of local and internatio­nal laws,” the group said in a statement.

In areas controlled by the Karen, more than a dozen civilians have been killed and over 20,000 displaced since March 27, according to the Free Burma Rangers, a relief agency operating in the region.

About 3,000 Karen fled to Thailand, but many have returned under unclear circumstan­ces. Thai authoritie­s said they went back voluntaril­y, but aid groups say they are not safe and many are hiding in the jungle and in caves on the Myanmar side of the border.

More than a dozen minority groups have sought greater autonomy from the central government for decades, sometimes through armed struggle.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Anti-coup protesters line up in formAtion with homemAde Air rifles during A demonstrAt­ion in YAngon, MyAnmAr, on SAturdAy.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Anti-coup protesters line up in formAtion with homemAde Air rifles during A demonstrAt­ion in YAngon, MyAnmAr, on SAturdAy.

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