[NYTr] Burma: Hundreds may be dead, as junta tries to hide brutality
All the News That Doesn't Fit
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Sun Sep 30 19:02:41 EDT 2007
The Independent - Sep 29, 2007
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/article3010196.ece
Burma: Hundreds may be dead, as junta tries to keep brutality unseen
By Rosalind Russellin Rangoon
Burma's military leaders locked down monasteries, arrested dissidents
and set up barricades across Rangoon yesterday in an attempt to
suffocate the waves of street demonstrations calling for an end to
their rule.
They also tried to cut off ordinary people's communication with the
outside world, heightening fears that the crackdown that appears to
have knocked the wind from the demonstrations could become more violent.
Yet, despite the regime's best efforts, a day after security forces
killed at least nine demonstrators - dissident groups say the total
could be as high as 200 - hundreds again risked their lives to defy the
government in small but angry protests across Burma's main city.
Locked inside their monasteries, or banished from the city, the
cinnamon-robed monks who have formed the backbone to the dignified
protest of the past week were largely gone. In their place were
civilians, less disciplined and more angry, some with bandanas around
their faces. Shouting, jeering groups moved quickly around the city in
an attempt to gather in large numbers. But the military, with soldiers
packed in the back of trucks, raced after them, quickly breaking up
gatherings with threats and force.
In Thanwe township, a decaying residential area in north-east Rangoon,
witnesses said soldiers fired shots amid skirmishes with protesters.
"It's finished!" shouted a soldier as a group of young men scattered.
When faced with lines of soldiers with rifles and riot shields, some
protesters threw rocks and bottles in retreat.
Without the moral authority, organisation and discipline of the
country's much revered Buddhist clergy, it seemed the soldier's words
may ring true. With the civilian leaders of the pro-democracy movement
who organised the initial protests last month having been arrested and
jailed, Burma's rulers seem to have taken the upper hand.
"Government go away!" a young man in a sarong and flip-flops shouted in
English, banging on the roof of our car as it moved through an agitated
and disorganised crowd.
Gone was the pride and hope that accompanied the well-ordered marches
led by the monks. In its place came fear and confusion. One Western
diplomat said that, in another blow to the protesters, hundreds of
suspected dissidents were arrested in raids across the city yesterday,
with 50 taken in one swoop alone.
The military had moved on the monks overnight, raiding monasteries that
were identified as hotbeds of protest, beating them up by the dozen and
shipping them back to their villages - all away from the eyes of the
world. Rangoon's temples, including the Sule and Shwedagon pagodas
around which the monks had been rallying, have been declared "danger
zones" and cordoned off with barbed wire.
Yesterday, authorities shut Burma's only internet server and blocked all
text and picture messaging on mobiles, in an effort to stem the violent
images leaving the country, including pictures of a Japanese
photographer shot in front of the Sule Pagoda. Though foreign
journalists are banned, the regime ordered soldiers to go door-to-door
at some hotels looking for foreigners.
With widespread outrage and words of encouragement, but so far no
practical support from the outside world, the protesters' only fuel is
pent-up anger at 45 years of unbroken military rule. Burma's generals
have ruined a resource-rich country through mismanagement and greed. A
hike in fuel prices in August was the final straw for citizens who have
kept quiet since a 1988 uprising was brutally crushed, killing up to
6,000 people.
Last night, the UN's special envoy to Burma was heading to the country
to promote a political solution and could arrive as early as today.
Also the UN Human Rights Council announced it would be holding a
special session about Burma next week. It will be the first meeting of
its kind since it gathered to talk about Darfur last year.
At the same time, a disturbing picture was emerging of Thursday's
crackdown. Bob Davis, Australia's ambassador to Burma, said he had
unconfirmed reports the death toll after two days of violence was
"several multiples of the 10 acknowledged by the authorities". The
Washington-based dissident group, US Campaign for Burma, said around
200 protesters had been killed.
"It's tragic," said Shari Villarosa, the most senior US diplomat in the
country. "These were peaceful demonstrators, very well behaved."
A Burmese journalist who gave her account to The Independent, said: "The
police were shooting everything - houses, trees, anything. The bullets
were flying over our heads. It was as if they were on drugs and were
crazy." Seven young people ran from the protest in Thanwe and tried to
hide in long grass, the 23-year-old journalist said. "Informers were
pointing to the grass, people got up and ran, but the police just fired
into their backs. Four were gunned down straight away. Shot dead."
Following phone talks with the US President, George Bush, and the
Chinese Premier, Wen Jiabao, Gordon Brown said: "I am afraid we believe
the loss of life is far greater than is being reported."
The Prime Minister called for greater UN efforts and EU sanctions. "Now
we have seen pictures from Burma and now we can hear voices from the
Burmese people, there is no amount of censorship and no amount of
violence that can silence the will of the Burmese people," he said.
Mr Brown added: "The eyes of the world are not only upon them. The
anger of the world is now being expressed."
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