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Saturday, March 27, 2021

Dozens feared dead as security forces stage violent crackdown

AFP
Frontier Myanmar
MARCH 27, 2021

A protester in Yangon's Thaketa Township walks along a smoke-filled road earlier today. (Frontier)


Security forces killed at least 24 protesters today, witnesses said, in violent crackdowns on demonstrations across the country as the military regime staged a major show of force for its annual Armed Forces Day parade.

The capital Nay Pyi Taw saw a grand parade of troops and military vehicles in the morning, with a speech by Senior General Min Aung Hlaing warning that acts of so-called “terrorism” were unacceptable.

By afternoon, as protesters continued to come out across Myanmar, AFP verified at least 24 people were killed – though local media put the death toll at far higher, with Myanmar Now reporting 91 killed.

The embassies of both the European Union and the United Kingdom condemned the bloodshed.

“This 76th Myanmar Armed Forces day will stay engraved as a day of terror and dishonour. The killing of unarmed civilians, including children, are indefensible acts,” the EU embassy in Yangon said on social media.

Former colonial power Britain also said that the security forces “have disgraced themselves by shooting unarmed civilians”.

Violence erupted all over Mandalay Region as security forces opened fire at protesters, killing at least nine in four different cities– one of them a doctor in Wundwin and a 14-year-old girl in Meiktila, according to rescue workers on the ground.

“Four men were brought to us dead,” an emergency worker from Mandalay, Myanmar’s second largest city, told AFP, as she frantically tried to treat dozens of injured.

A protester in Myingyan, who witnessed a man killed when he was shot in the neck, said the death toll will likely grow as security forces have continued shooting across his city. “Today is like a revolution day for us.”

In Sagaing region, at least five were killed in two cities — one of them a 13-year-old boy who was killed in the crossfire of a crackdown, according to a resident of Shwebo.

“He was just sitting inside his house,” said the resident, adding that the teenager was supposed to become a novice monk.

In Shan State, security forces opened fire on university students, killing at least three, while in the tourist city of Bagan, a march through ancient pagodas turned into mayhem when one protesting tour guide was shot dead.

Across Yangon, plumes of smoke rose above the former capital which has emerged as a hotspot for unrest in recent weeks.

An overnight gathering in front of a police station in the city’s south – where demonstrators called for the release of their friends – became violent around midnight, and the shooting only stopped around 4am, said a resident.

At least five died, one of them a 20-year-old boy in her neighbourhood whose funeral she will attend.

“The conditions on the ground is very scary,” she told AFP.

A baby playing on the street in a northern Yangon township was hit in the eye with a rubber bullet when police opened fire at nearby protesters. She was rushed to the hospital by her parents.

Further north near Insein Prison, a pre-dawn rally – which had protesters wearing bicycle helmets and shielded by sandbag barricades – devolved into chaos when soldiers started shooting.

At least one was killed – a 21-year-old police officer, Chit Lin Thu, who had joined the anti-coup movement.

“He was shot in the head and died at home,” his father, Joseph, told AFP.

“I am extremely sad for him, but at the same time, I am proud of my son”.
‘Enemy of democracy’

During a speech at the Armed Forces Day parade, Min Aung Hlaing once again defended the February 1 coup and pledged to yield power after new elections.

But he also issued another threat to the anti-coup movement that has gripped the country since he took charge, warning that acts of “terrorism which can be harmful to state tranquillity and security” were unacceptable.

“The democracy we desire would be an undisciplined one if they pay no respect to and violate the law,” he said.

Armed Forces Day commemorates the start of local resistance to the Japanese occupation during World War II, and usually accompanies a military parade attended by foreign officers and diplomats.

The military announced that eight international delegations attended Saturday’s event, including China and Russia, and Myanmar state media showed Russian deputy defence minister Alexander Fomin in the audience.

According to Russian news agency Interfax, the defence ministry announced that Russian-made military equipment – tanks, fighter jets and helicopters – were included in the parade.

A group of ousted parliamentarians working underground against the military – the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw – condemned the show of might after a bloody seven weeks.

“We should not allow these military generals to celebrate after they killed our brothers and sisters,” said its UN special envoy, Dr Sasa, during a Facebook live stream of a “Global Virtual Protest”.

“They are the enemy of democracy … We will never surrender until democracy is achieved, until federal democracy is built, and until freedom comes to our people.”
Growing death toll

“These are not the actions of a professional military or police force,” said the US embassy in Myanmar Saturday on its Facebook page.

“On Myanmar’s Armed Forces Day, security forces are murdering unarmed civilians, including children, the very people they swore to protect,” it said, calling for the return of democracy.

“Myanmar’s people have spoken clearly: they do not want to live under military rule.”

Saturday’s bloodshed adds to the current toll of nearly 330 killed in demonstrations against the coup, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a monitoring group.

The day before, a message was broadcast on state television, warning young people not to participate in what it called a “violent movement”.

“Learn the lesson from those who have brutally died… do not die for nothing,” it said.

The protest movement has also included widespread strikes by civil servants, which have brought many basic government functions to a halt.

Coming on top of a COVID-19 pandemic that hit Myanmar hard, the events since the coup have also struck the economy. The World Bank has warned the country faces a huge 10 percent slump in GDP in 2020-21.

This article has been updated to include embassy statements and an increased verified death toll, although the actual number is believed to be far higher.

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