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Home / World

Images from a 'day of shame' in Myanmar with dozens gunned down

By Richard C. Paddock
New York Times·
29 Mar, 2021 05:00 AM6 mins to read

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Nay Win Tun and Moe Moe Khine's 1-year-old daughter was struck in the eye by a rubber bullet fired by the security forces while the baby was inside their home. Photo / The New York Times

Nay Win Tun and Moe Moe Khine's 1-year-old daughter was struck in the eye by a rubber bullet fired by the security forces while the baby was inside their home. Photo / The New York Times

A rights group said it had documented 90 killings by the security forces on Saturday. It appeared to be the bloodiest day since protests against the military coup began.

On the eve of a major military celebration, Myanmar's army warned people not to come out to protest or they could be shot "in the back," or in the head.

But turn out they did on Saturday, and they were met with brutal force. At least dozens were killed, and perhaps more than 100, in what appeared to be the worst day of violence in Myanmar since the February 1 military coup.

Many of the victims were bystanders. Among those shot and killed were a 5-year-old boy, two 13-year-old boys and a 14-year-old girl. A baby girl in Yangon, Myanmar's largest city, was struck in the eye with a rubber bullet. Her parents said she was expected to live.

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As of Friday, the security forces had killed more than 320 people since the nationwide street protests against the coup began, with thousands more imprisoned. The Assistance Association of Political Prisoners, a rights group based in Myanmar and Thailand, said it had documented 90 killings on Saturday, adding that "the actual number of fatalities is likely much higher."

Myanmar Now, a respected news site, reported that 114 people had been killed across the country.

"Today is a day of shame for the armed forces," Dr. Sasa, a spokesman for a group of elected officials who say they represent Myanmar's government, said in a statement. The killings also drew worldwide condemnation, including from the United States, Britain and the European Union.

Saturday was Armed Forces Day, a holiday honouring the Tatmadaw, as the military is known. At a military parade in Naypyitaw, the capital, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, who led the overthrow of Myanmar's civilian government last month, said the army was determined "to protect people from all danger."

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A protester running past a roadblock in Yangon. Photo / The New York Times
A protester running past a roadblock in Yangon. Photo / The New York Times
An injured protester being carried to a hospital. Photo / The New York Times
An injured protester being carried to a hospital. Photo / The New York Times
The police arresting a protester in Yangon. Photo / The New York Times
The police arresting a protester in Yangon. Photo / The New York Times

Among more than 3,000 people who have been detained by the military since the coup are the ousted civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, and the president, Win Myint. Their party, the National League for Democracy, won by a landslide in November.

In his speech to the assembled troops, which was broadcast on national television, Min Aung Hlaing noted that the Tatmadaw was founded by General Aung San, a national hero. He did not mention that the general was Suu Kyi's father.

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The Armed Forces Day ceremony, a highlight of the year for the Tatmadaw, is usually attended by a slew of foreign diplomats. This year there were fewer, representing China and several other neighbouring countries.

Also present was Russia's deputy defence minister, Alexander Fomin, who was singled out for praise by Min Aung Hlaing. On Friday, the general gave Fomin a medal and a ceremonial sword.

Russia has been an important supplier of weapons to the Myanmar military, and as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council it can be counted on, along with China, to block any attempt by the international body to impose sanctions on Myanmar.

The United States said Thursday that it was imposing its own financial sanctions on two military-owned conglomerates that control a large segment of Myanmar's economy.

On Saturday, the US ambassador to Myanmar, Thomas Vajda, said the security forces were "murdering unarmed civilians, including children," and he called the bloodshed "horrifying."

Family members mourning as social workers took away the body of U Win Myint, 46, who was shot in the chest as security forces fired on protesters in Dala Township. Photo / The New York Times
Family members mourning as social workers took away the body of U Win Myint, 46, who was shot in the chest as security forces fired on protesters in Dala Township. Photo / The New York Times
Protesters preparing for a crackdown by the security forces. Photo / The New York Times
Protesters preparing for a crackdown by the security forces. Photo / The New York Times
Protesters take refuge behind makeshift barriers. Photo / The New York Times
Protesters take refuge behind makeshift barriers. Photo / The New York Times

The US Embassy said shots had been fired at its cultural center in Yangon, the American Center, on Saturday. The embassy said that no one was hurt and that it was investigating.

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In an apparent blow to the military on its holiday, the ethnic rebel group known as the Karen National Union said that it had overrun and seized a Tatmadaw camp, killing 10 soldiers. The group posted on Facebook photos of weapons it said it had seized, including what appeared to be machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.

On Saturday night, the Tatmadaw launched an airstrike against a village in a territory controlled by the Karen National Union near the border with Thailand, the rebel group said. A spokesperson for the Karen Peace Support Network, a civil society group working in the area, told Reuters there were reports that two people had been killed and two wounded, but communication was difficult in the remote region and more casualties were feared.

The Tatmadaw has fought for decades with various ethnic groups in Myanmar, including the Karen. Some opposition leaders hope that urban protesters, who are mainly from the majority Bamar ethnic group, can build a coalition with the ethnic groups to resist the Tatmadaw.

The widespread killings Saturday came a day after military-run television threatened protesters with being "shot in the back and the back of the head" if they persisted in opposing military rule.

A protester with a gunshot wound arriving at a hospital in Yangon. Photo / The New York Times
A protester with a gunshot wound arriving at a hospital in Yangon. Photo / The New York Times
Social workers carrying away the coffin of Kyaw Htet Aung. Photo / The New York Times
Social workers carrying away the coffin of Kyaw Htet Aung. Photo / The New York Times

According to the Assistance Association of Political Prisoners, which has tracked arrests and killings since the coup, about one-quarter of those killed as of Friday had been shot in the head.

The bloodshed Saturday took place in more than two dozen cities across the country.

In Meiktila, a city in central Myanmar, 14-year-old Ma Pan Ei Phyu was at home when the security forces began firing randomly in the neighbourhood, said her father, Min Min Tun. The family did not hear the shot that killed her, and they did not realize that she had been hit until she fell to the floor.

In Yangon, 13-year-old Maung Wai Yan Tun was playing outside when the police and soldiers arrived. Scared, he ran away and was shot, his mother told the online news outlet Mizzima. The family went to recover his body, but finding it surrounded by security forces, they dared not approach.

"Today's killing of unarmed civilians, including children, marks a new low," Britain's foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, wrote in a Twitter post on Saturday. "We will work with our international partners to end this senseless violence, hold those responsible to account, and secure a path back to democracy,"

One of the bloodiest incidents took place in Dala township near Yangon. On Friday afternoon, police arrested two protesters at their home.

Soon after, neighbours gathered outside the police station and demanded their release. The police responded by firing rubber bullets and stun grenades at the crowd, one witness said.

The residents retreated but returned to the police station after midnight. This time, after a lengthy standoff, the security forces opened fire with live ammunition. At least 10 people were killed and 40 injured.


Written by: Richard C. Paddock
Photographs by: The New York Times
© 2021 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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