People in Myanmar Continue to Protest against Military Coup Despite Army Violence

  February 10, 2021   News ID 1883
People in Myanmar Continue to Protest against Military Coup Despite Army Violence
People return to streets of capital with two people in hospital after police used rubber bullets, water cannon on Tuesday.

Myanmar, SAEDNEWS, Feb. 10: People returned to the streets of Naypyidaw, Myanmar’s remote capital, and Yangon, on Wednesday, after the police used rubber bullets and water cannon to break up protests leaving two people in hospital, one of them fighting for her life.

Several civil servants from the energy ministry were seen walking out of their workplace on Wednesday, as they denounced the coup leaders and called for the restoration of parliament.

“The coup must fail,” the protesters shouted.

In the country’s largest city of Yangon, thousands of protesters also took to the streets, with many young female demonstrators wearing costumes as a way to creatively show their opposition to the military.

Meanwhile, images on social media showed dozens of Myanmar police officers from Kayah State joining the protest and raising the three finger salute in defiance of the military.

Healthcare workers, in their green hospital gowns and with their masks on, also joined in the protests in Karen State’s Myawaddy Township, according to a report by the Irrawaddy News.

The United Nations and the United States condemned the use of force against the protesters, who want elected leader Aung Suu Kyi Kyi and other politicians from the ruling National League for Democracy (NLD) released and a return to civilian rule.

“We cannot stay quiet,” youth leader Esther Ze Naw told Reuters news agency. “If there is blood shed during our peaceful protests, then there will be more if we let them take over the country.”

Hundreds of government workers marched through Naypyidaw in support of a civil disobedience campaign that sprung up in the wake of last week’s coup and has been joined by people including doctors, teachers and railway workers. Tens of thousands have taken to the streets across the country in recent days.

Late on Tuesday, the military raided the Yangon headquarters of the NLD.

“The military dictator raided and destroyed NLD headquarters at around 9.30pm (15:00 GMT),” the National League for Democracy announced in a short statement on its Facebook page.

The raid was carried out by about a dozen police personnel, who forced their way into the building in the commercial capital after dark, elected lawmakers said.

The party, which won November 2020’s election by a landslide, had been due to start a second term on the day the military seized power (Source: AlJazeera).


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