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Thursday March 28, 2024

Myanmar defends rally crackdown as police arrest more protesters

YANGON: Myanmar authorities have defended a crackdown on a Yangon rally that saw police and men in civilian clothes beat unarmed protesters, as security forces made fresh arrests on Friday.In a defiant statement as authorities launched a third day of action against several demonstrations, the state-run Mirror newspaper said police

By our correspondents
March 07, 2015
YANGON: Myanmar authorities have defended a crackdown on a Yangon rally that saw police and men in civilian clothes beat unarmed protesters, as security forces made fresh arrests on Friday.
In a defiant statement as authorities launched a third day of action against several demonstrations, the state-run Mirror newspaper said police acted legitimately to disperse a rally on Thursday in the heart of Yangon.
Several people were wounded in the incident and eight briefly detained.
“The authorities repeatedly asked the people to disperse. But because the protesters fought back against the authorities, there was a crackdown and some protesters were detained,” the report said.
Activists have insisted it was a peaceful protest.
Their rally in Yangon, held in solidarity with a rolling student demonstration calling for education reform, comes as several groups of workers also staged strikes over pay.
In the latest arrests early on Friday, authorities in the central town of Letpadan detained five student protesters, according to activists.
“Some students sneaked out through police barriers and joined with the people who came to support our strike,” student leader Min Thway Thit told AFP, adding that the situation had since calmed.
Around 50 students also gathered in Yangon in the afternoon for a peaceful demonstration that passed without incident.
Observers fear democratic reforms in Myanmar, which is gradually emerging from decades of authoritarian rule, are stalling in the run-up to a breakthrough general election slated for the end of this year.
The latest crackdown has deepened concerns that authorities have not lost the repressive reflex forged during the junta era.
Myanmar’s authorities have a long history of using groups of hired civilians to violently disperse protesters — most recently in 2007 when thugs attacked protesting monks and civilians during a period of large demonstrations that came to be known as the “Saffron Revolution”.
President’s office director Zaw Htay sparked an angry online reaction after a post on his personal Facebook page suggested using deputised civilians against protesters was legal under Myanmar’s penal code.
“Law. of the Thugs, by the Thugs, for the Thugs,” said one comment on Facebook responding to the post, which has since been deleted.
The eight activists arrested in the Yangon protest were released early on Friday without charge, one of them told AFP.
“What happened yesterday was completely unacceptable,” said Nilar Thein, a leader of 88 Generation students group who was released on Friday.
“The students have been protesting peacefully,” she added.
Students have rallied for months against an education law, demanding changes to the legislation to decentralise the school system, teach in ethnic languages, and allow the formation of student unions.
A few hundred students remain surrounded by riot police in Letpadan after refusing to give up their plans to march to Yangon, some 130 kilometres further south.
Student activism is a potent political force in Myanmar with young campaigners at the forefront of several major uprisings, including a huge 1988 demonstration that prompted a bloody military assault under the former junta.
The 88 Generation is made up largely of student activists from that mass protest, which also saw the rise of Aung San Suu Kyi’s opposition.