From the DW:
“Myanmar
protests: Death toll passes 500”
Activists in
Yangon have launched a "garbage strike" while armed rebel groups have
demanded the military stop the bloodshed or face retaliation. The death toll in
Myanmar's military crackdown on anti-coup demonstrators has reached 510, the
Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) confirmed on Tuesday,
warning that the true toll might be higher.
The AAPP said at least eight
civilians were killed in Myanmar's biggest city Yangon on Monday. The total
number of deaths the watchdog recorded on Monday was 14. International pressure
is mounting on Myanmar's junta for using force against protesters since the
military ousted the elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1. On Monday, the United States suspended a trade
deal with Myanmar, demanding the restoration of a democratic government. The
US, Canada, Britain and the European Union had imposed sanctions on Myanmar's
military generals.International organizations, including the United Nations,
have continuously condemned the crackdown.
'Garbage
strike' Garbage covered the streets of Yangon on Tuesday as activists found
a new way to protest the coup. Images
circulated on Twitter showed piles of garbage at main road intersections after
protesters asked residents to leave their rubbish as a form of civil
disobedience. According to local media, authorities warned that they
would take action against those who threw out garbage in Kyeemyindaing
district, western Yangon. Earlier
in March, Myanmar's junta imposed martial law in two districts in Yangon to
gain more power amid increasing protests in the city.
Armed groups
threaten the military Three of Myanmar's armed ethnic rebel groups issued a
joint statement threatening the military with retaliation. The
Ta'ang National Liberation Army, the Myanmar Nationalities Democratic Alliance
Army and the Arakan Army (AA) said if the junta did not stop the bloodshed,
they would "cooperate with the protesters and fight back." The statement came after the General
Strike Committee of Nationalities (GSCN), one of the leading groups organizing
demonstrations, called for ethnic minority forces to help protesters. Since
Myanmar's independence from Britain in 1948, armed rebel groups have fought the
central government for decades for more autonomy.
^ The people of
Myanmar want and deserve to live in a Democracy and not in a Military Junta.
The Military has shown how bad they truly are. Most of the world does nothing
while others (like China and Russia) support the death and violence of the Military
Junta in Myanmar. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/myanmar-protests-death-toll-passes-500/a-57046306
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