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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Bangkok (AFP) Feb 21, 2021
A Facebook page run by the Myanmar junta's "True News" information service was kicked off the platform Sunday after the tech giant accused it of inciting violence. Security forces in the country have steadily increased violence against a massive and largely peaceful civil disobedience campaign demanding the return of deposed civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi. The Nobel laureate was taken into custody along with her top political allies at the start of the month, but the new regime has insisted it took power lawfully. It has used Facebook to claim Suu Kyi's landslide election victory last November was tainted by voter fraud and issue stark warnings to the protest movement -- which is demanding that the army relinquish power. A spokesperson for the platform said the Tatmadaw True News Information Team page was removed for "repeated violations of our Community Standards prohibiting incitement of violence and coordinating harm". The social media giant has banned hundreds of army-linked pages in recent years after being criticised for its ineffective response to malicious posts in the country. Much of the content targeted the country's stateless Rohingya Muslim minority, around 750,000 of whom fled into neighbouring Bangladesh after an army crackdown in 2017. Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing and other top military leaders were booted from the platform a year later, following a UN investigation that recommended they face a genocide prosecution over the violence. The platform has also banned insurgent groups battling the military on the country's frontiers and a hardline Buddhist monks' group accused of inciting violence against Muslims. Much of Myanmar has been in uproar since Suu Kyi's ouster on February 1, with large street demonstrations seen in major cities and isolated villages alike. Two people were killed on Saturday after security forces fired on a crowd in the central city of Mandalay. The junta has also imposed nightly internet blackouts and banned social media platforms including Facebook in an effort to bring the protest campaign to heel.
UN condemns Myanmar junta after three killed in anti-coup unrest Authorities have gradually ratcheted up their tactics against a massive and largely peaceful civil disobedience campaign demanding the return of ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi. In the early hours of Monday, Myanmar plunged into an eighth straight night of internet blackouts, monitoring group NetBlocks confirmed, ahead of a new day of planned major protests. Saturday marked the deadliest day so far in more than two weeks of nationwide street demonstrations after two people were killed when security forces fired upon a rally in Mandalay, while a third man was shot dead in Yangon. Protesters in Yangon, Monywa and Myitkyina held candlelight vigils and prayer ceremonies on Sunday to pay tribute to the dead. United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres condemned the use of "deadly violence" against the crowd in Mandalay. "The use of lethal force, intimidation & harassment against peaceful demonstrators is unacceptable," Guterres wrote on Twitter. Late on Sunday, Myanmar's foreign ministry accused the UN and foreign countries of "flagrant interference" in its internal affairs. "Despite facing the unlawful demonstrations, incitements of unrest and violence, the authorities concerned are exercising utmost restraint through minimum use of force to address the disturbances," it said in a statement. - Deadly confrontation - Security forces in Mandalay, the country's second-largest city, had attempted to raid a shipyard and detain port staff on strike to protest against the army takeover. Medical rescue workers said troops used live rounds and rubber bullets against a crowd of people who had started flinging rocks in an effort to stop the arrests. "Two people were killed," said Hlaing Min Oo, the chief of a Mandalay-based volunteer emergency rescue team. Another 30 were wounded, with half of the injuries from live rounds, he added. A graphic video circulated on Facebook showing a teenaged victim splayed on the ground and bleeding from his head as a bystander placed a hand on his chest to feel for a heartbeat. State media made no mention of the deaths but blamed demonstrators for the affray and said protest leaders had been detained. "Some" protesters had been injured by security forces, the Global New Light of Myanmar reported, along with three soldiers and eight police officers. In a separate incident on Saturday, a 30-year-old man was killed in Yangon while patrolling the neighbourhood as part of an initiative to guard against night-time arrests of activists. Tin Htut Hein's sister-in-law said he had been shot dead by police. "His wife is now heartbroken," she said. "They have a four-year-old son." Police claimed 20 people attacked a vehicle while officers tried to bring an injured man to hospital, the state-run broadcaster said, and reportedly fired warning shots to disperse the group. Undeterred by the violence of the previous day, large crowds returned to the streets of Mandalay and Yangon on Sunday. In the capital Naypyidaw, a funeral service was held for a young protester who died Friday after being shot in the head at a rally. Mya Thwate Thwate Khaing, who turned 20 almost two weeks ago as she lay unconscious in a hospital bed, has since become a potent symbol of the campaign against military rule. A large motorbike guard of honour accompanied her funeral procession, alongside vehicles adorned with floral wreaths and large photos of the grocery store worker. Vigils in her honour have been held elsewhere in the country by protesters reciting the Metta Sutta, a Buddhist prayer urging protection from harm. - National uproar - Much of Myanmar has been in uproar since troops detained Suu Kyi on February 1, with massive street demonstrations in major cities and isolated villages across the country. The United States, Britain and Canada have all responded with sanctions targeting Myanmar's top generals. European Union foreign ministers will meet Monday to discuss their own measures against the regime. The UN General Assembly is scheduled to convene on Friday for informal talks about the situation of Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims, but the coup is likely to take centre stage. Since the army takeover, 640 people have been detained, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners monitoring group. Among those targeted have been railway workers, civil servants and bank staff, who have walked off their jobs as part of the anti-coup campaign. Popular actor Lu Min became the latest high-profile celebrity taken into custody for denouncing the regime. "Many police trucks came and arrested (him)," said his wife Khin Sabel Oo, in a video she broadcast live on Facebook as her husband was taken away. bur-lpm/sst
![]() ![]() Two dead as Myanmar police open fire on protesters in deadliest day since coup Yangon (AFP) Feb 20, 2021 Two people were killed in Myanmar's second largest city as security forces fired live rounds on protestors, emergency workers and doctors said Saturday - the latest show of force from a junta regime that has faced two straight weeks of anti-coup demonstrations. Much of the country has been in uproar since the military deposed civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, with large street demonstrations seen in major cities and isolated villages alike. Authorities have responded with increasi ... read more
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