From Reuters:
“Myanmar
anti-junta protests spread, social media disrupted”
The lawyer for
Myanmar’s elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and ousted President Win Myint said
they were being held in their homes after being detained on Monday when the
army seized power and that he was unable to meet them. Lawyer Khin Maung Zaw
said he was seeking their unconditional release but had been told they were
still under investigation.
Teachers and
students in Myanmar earlier rallied to a growing civil disobedience campaign as
the anti-coup protest movement won the support of Suu Kyi’s political party. The
Nobel Peace laureate, 75, has not been seen since her arrest on Monday. Police
have filed charges against her for illegally importing and using six
walkie-talkie radios found at her home. “We expect justice from the judge, but
it is not certain. We hope for the best, but prepare for the worst. Of course,
we want unconditional release as they have not broken the law,” her lawyer told
reporters in the capital, Naypyidaw. Stepping up measures to quell discontent,
police arrested one of Suu Kyi’s veteran aides and dozens of people who had
joined noisy demonstrations against Monday’s coup.
International
pressure on the junta increased with the U.N. Security Council urging the
release of detainees and Washington considering sanctions on the ruling
generals. U.N. Myanmar envoy Christine Schraner Burgener strongly condemned the
military’s actions in a call with the country’s deputy military chief Soe Win
and called for the immediate release of all those detained, a U.N. spokesman
said on Friday. Two days after a temporary ban on Facebook., authorities
ordered internet providers to block Twitter and Instagram, said Norway’s
Telenor Asa [TEL.OL]. Twitter user numbers had jumped after the ban on
Facebook. Teachers became the latest group to join a civil disobedience
campaign with some lecturers refusing to work or cooperate with authorities
over the coup that halted a long and unsteady transition to democracy. “We want
the military coup to fail,” said lecturer Nwe Thazin Hlaing at the Yangon
University of Education. Reuters was unable to reach the government for
comment.
The
disobedience campaign, which began with doctors, has also spread to some
government offices and on Friday won the formal backing of Suu Kyi’s National
League for Democracy (NLD). In a statement, the party denounced the coup and
Suu Kyi’s detention as “unacceptable” and said it would help people who are
arrested or sacked for opposing the takeover. Army chief Min Aung Hlaing took
power saying there were irregularities in an election last November, which the
NLD won in a landslide. The electoral commission has said the vote was fair. There
has been no outpouring of people onto the streets in a country with a bloody
history of crackdowns on protests, but there were signs of coup opponents
growing bolder - with dozens of youths parading in the southeastern city of
Dawei.
COLOUR RED In
the biggest city, Yangon, supporters hung red clothing, ribbons and balloons
outside their homes to show support for Suu Kyi. “I hung my red dress
outside the shop since yesterday to show our support for Mother Suu,” said Cho
Cho, 39, a salad shop owner. “This is our last fight for democracy: The fight
for our children.” But authorities also began to step up action against
coup opponents. In Myanmar’s second city of Mandalay, 30 people were
arrested over pot-banging protests which have taken place for the last three
nights. Eleven Media quoted Maung Maung Aye, deputy head of the regional
police force, as saying they were accused of breaking a law against “causing
noise in public streets”. The latest high-profile detainee was
79-year-old Win Htein, a stalwart of Suu Kyi who was repeatedly imprisoned
during their decades of struggling against previous juntas. “I have
never been scared of them because I have done nothing wrong my entire life,” he
told Reuters by phone as he was taken away. Reuters was unable to reach
police for comment on his arrest or what charges could be brought against him.
The 15-member
U.N. Security Council in a statement on Thursday called for the release of all
detainees and for respect for human rights, fundamental freedoms and the rule
of law. But before it won consensus among members that include China and
Russia, which have close ties to Myanmar’s army, the language of the draft was
changed to remove any mention of a coup.
‘CREDIBLE
ELECTION’ U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken will discuss Myanmar in a
Friday online meeting with his British, French and German counterparts, a U.S.
official said. National security adviser Jake Sullivan said on Thursday
targeted sanctions on individuals and on entities controlled by the military
were under consideration. He spoke by phone with ambassadors from the
Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) regional bloc. Indonesia and
Malaysia later said regional foreign ministers would be asked to hold a special
meeting on the situation. Myanmar’s generals have few overseas interests
that could be targeted by sanctions, but the military has extensive business
interests that could suffer if foreign partners leave. Japanese drinks
company Kirin Holdings said on Friday it was terminating its alliance with a
top Myanmar conglomerate whose owners, according to the United Nations, include
members of the military. Kirin said the coup had “shaken the very foundation of
the partnership”.
^ Myanmar (or Burma)
was under a Military Dictatorship from 1962-2011 so the people there know what
repression is. It is sad to see another Military Coup take control. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.