Senin, 08 Maret 2021

Myanmar security forces trap protesters as UN and US urge restraint - CNA

YANGON: Myanmar security forces cornered hundreds of young protesters overnight in a district of Yangon and threatened to hunt for them door to door as the United States and United Nations appealed for them to be allowed to leave.

Thousands of people defied a night time curfew to take to the streets of Myanmar's main city in support of the youths in the Sanchaung district, where they had been holding the latest daily protest against the Feb 1 coup.

The army takeover and arrest of elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi has plunged Myanmar into chaos. Security forces have killed over 60 protesters and detained more than 1,800 since then, an advocacy group said.

In Sanchaung, police firing guns and using stun grenades announced they would check houses for anyone from outside the district and would punish anyone caught hiding them.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres "calls for maximum restraint and urges for the safe release of all without violence or arrests," UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

The UN office in Myanmar as well as the US and British embassies appealed to security forces to allow protesters to leave without violence or arrest.

There was no sign of them withdrawing. On Facebook, residents and the local MTK news service posted that as of the early hours of Tuesday 20 people had been arrested in Sanchaung after police searched houses.

Tear gas and fire extinguisher gas float around demonstrators as they run away from police during a
Tear gas and fire extinguisher gas float around demonstrators as they run away from police during a protest against the military coup in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, on Mar 8, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Stringer)

Elsewhere in Yangon, thousands of people defied an 8pm curfew, chanting "Free the students in Sanchaung", prompting security forces to fire guns and use stun grenades to try to disperse them.

A military government spokesman did not answer calls requesting comment.

State television MRTV earlier said: "The government's patience has run out and while trying to minimise casualties in stopping riots, most people seek complete stability (and) are calling for more effective measures against riots."

Three protesters were killed in demonstrations in northern Myanmar and the Irrawaddy Delta on Monday, according to witnesses and local media.

DOORS BROKEN

In the Lanmadaw district of Yangon, residents said security forces broke down doors in overnight arrest raids after youths there said they had caught some suspected soldiers transporting weapons in a private car.

"Please help, my door is being broken," one woman posted on Facebook. Twenty minutes later she said her father and uncle had been taken away. She did not know where.

A woman shows a three-finger salute during a protest against the military coup in Naypyitaw
A woman shows a three-finger salute during a protest against the military coup in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, on Mar 8, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Stringer)

Demonstrations have been held daily for more than a month to demand the release of Aung San Suu Kyi and respect for the election her National League for Democracy (NLD) party won last November.

The army took power citing fraud in the ballot - an accusation rejected by the electoral commission. It has promised another election, but without giving a date.

The military has brushed off condemnation of its actions, as it has in past periods of army rule when outbreaks of protest were bloodily repressed.

READ: Australia halts defence ties with Myanmar, redirects aid

This time it is also under pressure from a civil disobedience movement that has crippled government business and from strikes at banks, factories and shops that shut much of Yangon on Monday.

In a diplomatic blow to the military government, Myanmar's ambassador in Britain followed its UN representative in calling on Monday for the release of Aung San Suu Kyi - drawing praise from British foreign minister Dominic Raab.

Police are seen in front of a protester barricade during a protest against the military coup in Yan
Police are seen in front of a protester barricade during a protest against the military coup in Yangon, Myanmar, on Mar 8, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Stringer)

Britain, the United States and some other Western countries have imposed limited sanctions on the military government.

The European Union is preparing to widen its sanctions to target army-run businesses, according to diplomats and two internal documents seen by Reuters.

Thailand's state broadcaster PBS said areas had been set aside along the border with Myanmar to house any refugees fleeing the unrest.

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2021-03-08 21:16:21Z
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3 protesters killed in Myanmar; shops and factories closed as workers go on strike - CNA

YANGON: Three protesters were killed in Myanmar on Monday (Mar 8), witnesses said, as demonstrators across the country sought to paralyse the economy with strike action following a weekend of night raids and arrests.

Shops, factories and banks were closed in the main city of Yangon.

Photos posted on Facebook showed the bodies of two men lying on the street in the northern town of Myitkyina. Witnesses said they were taking part in a protest when police fired stun grenades and tear gas. Several people were then hit by gunfire from buildings nearby.

One witness, who said he helped move the bodies, told Reuters two people were shot in the head and died on the spot. Three people were injured.

"How inhumane to kill unarmed civilians," said the witness, a 20-year-old man. "We must have our right to protest peacefully."

It was not immediately clear who fired on the protesters although both police and the military were at the protest, the witnesses said.

At least one person was killed and two injured during a protest in the town of Phyar Pon in the Irrawaddy Delta, a political activist and local media said.

Police and military have killed more than 50 people to quell daily demonstrations and strikes against the Feb 1 coup, according to the United Nations last week.

A military spokesman did not respond to calls asking for comment on the latest incidents. Police in Myitkyina and Phyar Pon also did not respond to calls.

Crowds demonstrating against the coup gathered in Yangon as well as the second-biggest city, Mandalay and several other towns, according to videos posted on Facebook. 

Protesters in Dawei, a coastal town in the south, were protected by the Karen National Union, an ethnic armed group engaged in a long-running war with the military.

Protesters march with makeshift shields during a demonstration in Mandalay on Mar 8, 2021
Protesters march with makeshift shields on a main road during a demonstration in Mandalay, Myanmar on Mar 8, 2021. (AP Photo)

Protesters waved flags fashioned from htamain (women's sarongs) in some places or hung them up on lines across the street to mark International Women's Day while denouncing the junta. Walking beneath women's sarongs is traditionally considered bad luck for men and tends to slow down police and soldiers.

Protesters gather by a collection of longyi, a traditional clothing widely worn in Myanmar
Protesters gather by a collection of longyi, a traditional clothing widely worn in Myanmar, strung across a road during a demonstration against the military coup in Yangon on Mar 7, 2021. (Photo: AFP/STR)

State media said security forces were keeping a presence at hospitals and universities as part of efforts to enforce the law.

At least nine unions covering sectors including construction, agriculture and manufacturing have called on "all Myanmar people" to stop work to reverse the coup and restore Aung San Suu Kyi's elected government.

Allowing business and economic activity to continue would help the military "as they repress the energy of the Myanmar people", the unions said in a statement.

"The time to take action in defence of our democracy is now."

Protesters display placards and flash a three-fingered sign of resistance during a demonstration
Protesters display placards and flash a three-fingered sign of resistance on a main road during a demonstration in Mandalay, Myanmar on Mar 8, 2021. (AP Photo)

READ: Body of 'Everything will be OK' protester exhumed in Myanmar

'FIGHT THAT FEAR'

Unions are seeking to extend the impact of an ongoing "Civil Disobedience Movement" - a campaign urging civil servants to boycott working under military rule - which has already hit state machinery hard.

The impact has been felt at every level of the national infrastructure, with hospital disruptions, empty ministry offices, and banks unable to operate.

The junta has warned that civil servants "will be fired" with immediate effect Monday if they continue to strike.

Only a few small tea-shops were open in Yangon, witnesses said. Major shopping centres were closed and there was no work going on at factories.

Protest leader Maung Saungkha on Facebook urged women to come out strongly against the coup on Monday, while Nay Chi, one of the organisers of the sarong movement, described the women as "revolutionaries".

"Our people are unarmed but wise. They try to rule with fear, but we will fight that fear," she told Reuters.

In a statement on Monday, the military said it had arrested 41 people the previous day.

An official and local campaign manager from Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) Khin Maung Latt died in police custody on Sunday.

Ba Myo Thein, a deposed lawmaker, said reports of bruising to Khin Maung Latt's head and body raised suspicions that he had been "tortured severely".

Police in the Pabedan district of Yangon, where Khin Maung Latt was arrested on Saturday night, declined to comment. A spokesman for the military did not answer calls seeking comment.

The army has said it is dealing with protests lawfully.

READ: Australia halts defence ties with Myanmar, redirects aid

READ: Boyfriend of Myanmar protest 'martyr' vows resistance

Figures by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners advocacy group showed nearly 1,800 people have been detained under the junta as of Sunday.

An announcement by the military carried on the front page of the State-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper on Monday threatened unspecified "action" against anyone who directly or indirectly works for a committee of ousted lawmakers that has declared itself the country's legitimate authority.

The announcement said the committee was illegal and had committed "high treason". A separate report said the military and police were "maintaining" hospitals and universities.

The killings have drawn anger in the West and been condemned by most democracies in Asia.

The United States and some other Western countries have imposed limited sanctions on the junta and Australia on Sunday cut defence ties, saying it would only deal with non-government groups in Myanmar.

Myanmar's giant neighbour China said on Sunday it was prepared to engage with "all parties" to ease the crisis and was not taking sides.

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2021-03-08 13:07:30Z
52781424088745

Thailand to cut COVID-19 quarantine period for vaccinated travellers - CNA

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  1. Thailand to cut COVID-19 quarantine period for vaccinated travellers  CNA
  2. Thailand backs Covid-19 vaccine passport plan ahead of wider reopening  The Straits Times
  3. Thailand: Anti-Government protesters return to streets, defying ban on public gathering  The Star Online
  4. Thai protesters rally to demand release of detained leaders  The Straits Times
  5. Thailand to reduce quarantine period for vaccinated travellers  The Star Online
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2021-03-08 10:43:49Z
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2 protesters killed in Myanmar, shops and factories closed - CNA

Two protesters were killed by gunshot wounds to the head in Myanmar on Monday (Mar 8), witnesses said, while shops, factories and banks were closed in the main city Yangon as part of the uprising against the country's military rulers.

Photos posted on Facebook showed the bodies of two men lying on the street in the northern town of Myitkyina. Witnesses said they were taking part in a protest when police fired stun grenades and tear gas. Several people were then hit by gunfire from buildings nearby.

One witness, who said he helped move the bodies, told Reuters two people were shot in the head and died on the spot. Three people were injured.

"How inhumane to kill unarmed civilians," said the witness, a 20-year-old man. "We must have our right to protest peacefully."

It was not immediately clear who fired on the protesters although both police and the military were at the protest, the witnesses said.

Police and military have killed more than 50 people to quell daily demonstrations and strikes against the Feb 1 coup, according to the United Nations last week.

Protesters march with makeshift shields during a demonstration in Mandalay on Mar 8, 2021
Protesters march with makeshift shields on a main road during a demonstration in Mandalay, Myanmar on Mar 8, 2021. (AP Photo)

Crowds demonstrating against the coup gathered in Yangon as well as the second-biggest city, Mandalay and several other towns, according to videos posted on Facebook. Protesters in Dawei, a coastal town in the south, were protected by the Karen National Union, an ethnic armed group engaged a long-running war with the military.

Protesters waved flags fashioned from htamain (women's sarongs) in some places or hung them up on lines across the street to mark International Women's Day while denouncing the junta. Walking beneath women's sarongs is traditionally considered bad luck for men and tends to slow down police and soldiers.

Protesters gather by a collection of longyi, a traditional clothing widely worn in Myanmar
Protesters gather by a collection of longyi, a traditional clothing widely worn in Myanmar, strung across a road during a demonstration against the military coup in Yangon on Mar 7, 2021. (Photo: AFP/STR)

State media said security forces were keeping a presence at hospitals and universities as part of efforts to enforce the law.

At least nine unions covering sectors including construction, agriculture and manufacturing have called on "all Myanmar people" to stop work to reverse the coup and restore Aung San Suu Kyi's elected government.

Allowing business and economic activity to continue would help the military "as they repress the energy of the Myanmar people", the unions said in a statement.

"The time to take action in defence of our democracy is now."

Protesters display placards and flash a three-fingered sign of resistance during a demonstration
Protesters display placards and flash a three-fingered sign of resistance on a main road during a demonstration in Mandalay, Myanmar on Mar 8, 2021. (AP Photo)

READ: Body of 'Everything will be OK' protester exhumed in Myanmar

'FIGHT THAT FEAR'

Only a few small tea-shops were open in Yangon, witnesses said. Major shopping centres were closed and there was no work going on at factories.

Protest leader Maung Saungkha on Facebook urged women to come out strongly against the coup on Monday, while Nay Chi, one of the organisers of the sarong movement, described the women as "revolutionaries".

"Our people are unarmed but wise. They try to rule with fear, but we will fight that fear," she told Reuters.

In a statement on Monday, the military said it had arrested 41 people the previous day.

An official and local campaign manager from Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) Khin Maung Latt died in police custody on Sunday.

Ba Myo Thein, a deposed lawmaker, said reports of bruising to Khin Maung Latt's head and body raised suspicions that he had been "tortured severely".

Police in the Pabedan district of Yangon, where Khin Maung Latt was arrested on Saturday night, declined to comment. A spokesman for the military did not answer calls seeking comment.

The army has said it is dealing with protests lawfully.

READ: Australia halts defence ties with Myanmar, redirects aid

READ: Boyfriend of Myanmar protest 'martyr' vows resistance

Figures by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners advocacy group showed nearly 1,800 people have been detained under the junta as of Sunday.

An announcement by the military carried on the front page of the State-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper on Monday threatened unspecified "action" against anyone who directly or indirectly works for a committee of ousted lawmakers that has declared itself the country's legitimate authority.

The announcement said the committee was illegal and had committed "high treason". A separate report said the military and police were "maintaining" hospitals and universities.

The killings have drawn anger in the West and been condemned by most democracies in Asia.

The United States and some other Western countries have imposed limited sanctions on the junta and Australia on Sunday cut defence ties, saying it would only deal with non-government groups in Myanmar.

Myanmar's giant neighbour China said on Sunday it was prepared to engage with "all parties" to ease the crisis and was not taking sides.

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2021-03-08 07:52:30Z
52781423724310

Meghan says British royals worried about how dark son Archie's skin would be - CNA

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  1. Meghan says British royals worried about how dark son Archie's skin would be  CNA
  2. Royals 'had concerns about Archie's skin colour': 5 most explosive claims about Royal Family from Meghan Markle’s Oprah interview  Yahoo Singapore News
  3. Meghan says contemplated suicide, alleges royal racism - The Jakarta Post  Jakarta Post
  4. Oprah interview: Meghan has cost you everything Harry - lets hope she's worth it COMMENT  Express
  5. Meghan and Harry Oprah interview live: couple claim palace failed to protect them  The Guardian
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2021-03-08 02:54:45Z
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Minggu, 07 Maret 2021

Myanmar police fire on protesters in ancient former capital Bagan - CNA

YANGON: Police in Myanmar’s ancient former capital, Bagan, opened fire Sunday (Mar 7) on demonstrators protesting last month’s military takeover, wounding several people, according to witness accounts and videos on social media.

At least five people were reported wounded as police sought to break up the Bagan protest, and photos showed one young man with bloody wounds on his chin and neck, believed to have been caused by a rubber bullet. Bullet casings collected at the scene indicated that live rounds were also fired.

The city, located in the central Mandalay region, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site in recognition of the more than 2,000 pagodas or their remnants still situated there, dating from the ninth to 13th centuries, when it was the capital of a kingdom that later became known as Burma and is now Myanmar.

READ: Myanmar unions call for nationwide strike starting Monday: Statement

Bagan is best known for being one of the country’s top tourist attractions, but it has also been the scene of large protest marches against the military’s Feb 1 seizure of power.

Myanmar
Riot police officers move in to disperse protesters during a demonstration in Yangon, Myanmar, Sunday, Mar 7, 2021. (Photo: AP)

Large protests have occurred daily across many cities and towns in Myanmar, and security forces have responded with greater use of lethal force and mass arrests. At least 18 protesters were shot and killed on Feb 28 and 38 on Wednesday, according to the UN Human Rights Office. More than 1,500 have been arrested, the independent Assistance Association for Political Prisoners said.

Protests elsewhere Sunday, including in the two biggest cities of Yangon and Mandalay, were also met with the use of force by police firing warning shots, and variously employing tear gas, rubber bullets and stun grenades.

READ: Body of 'Everything will be OK' protester exhumed in Myanmar

Multiple reports from Yangon said there were also police raids Saturday night seeking to seize organizers and supporters of the protest movement. A ward chairman from Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party, which was ousted from power in the coup, was found dead in a military hospital Sunday morning by fellow residents of his Pabedan neighbourhood, according to a post on Facebook by NLD lawmaker Sithu Maung.

Myanmar
Protesters are dispersed as riot police fired tear gas behind a makeshift barricade in Yangon, Myanmar, Sunday, Mar 7, 2021. (Photo: AP)
Myanmar
Anti-coup protesters discharge fire extinguishers to counter the impact of the tear gas fired by police during a demonstration in Mandalay, Myanmar, Sunday, Mar 7, 2021. (Photo: AP)

Suspicion was rampant on social media that Khin Maung Latt, 58, died due to a beating in custody after being taken from his residence, but no official cause of death was immediately announced.

In Yangon and elsewhere, raids are carried out nightly after an 8 pm curfew by police and soldiers. The arrests are often carried out at gunpoint, without warrants.

In videos taken Saturday night and posted online, sporadic fire from heavy weapons could be heard in some neighbourhoods.

The escalation of violence has put pressure on the global community to act to restrain the junta. The coup reversed years of slow progress toward democracy in Myanmar, which for five decades had languished under strict military rule that led to international isolation and sanctions.

READ: Escalating violence ups pressure for Myanmar action

Aung San Suu Kyi’s party led a return to civilian rule with a landslide election victory in 2015, and with an even greater margin of votes last year. It would have been installed for a second five-year term last month, but instead Suu Kyi and President Win Myint and other members of the government were placed in military detention.

A rare light note was struck Saturday when demonstrators in the central city of Monywa poured cans of beer over their feet and those of passers-by to show their contempt for the brewery’s owners — the military. Myanmar Beer is one of a number of business concerns in the country that are linked to the generals and has seen its sales plummet in the weeks following the coup. It also has lost its Japanese partner, Kirin, which announced it was pulling out of the joint venture as a result of the power grab.

In neighbouring Thailand, several thousand people, Thai as well as from Myanmar, rallied Sunday outside the regional office of the United Nations to bring attention to the crisis and their desire for international action to end the junta’s violence.

“I have a good life here, but I’m fighting for my relatives and families and friends in Myanmar. Since Day One (when) the military took our leader, we are here,” said 26-year-old Aye Nanda Soe, who works in digital marketing and lives in Bangkok with her mother and brother while her father resides in Yangon. “We want the UN to protect our people first, then help our leader. My people are not safe anymore.”

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2021-03-07 14:41:36Z
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Myanmar police fire on protesters in ancient former capital Bagan - CNA

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Myanmar police fire on protesters in ancient former capital Bagan  CNAView Full coverage on Google News
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2021-03-07 14:03:56Z
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