People protesting the coup in Myanmar yesterday sloshed red paint in the streets to symbolize the blood spilled and more than 700 lives lost in a brutal military crackdown.
The country is barely functioning and the economy has stalled since the military seized power from civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi on Feb. 1.
The military junta has sought to quell mass protests with lethal force, and a local monitoring group has verified at least 714 civilian deaths, but added that the toll is likely to be even higher.
Photo: AFP / Anonymous source
This week is Myanmar’s New Year festival, known as Thingyan, but normal festivities, such as public water fights, have been canceled.
Instead, protesters have been using Thingyan as a rallying point — as bus shelters and pavements were sprayed red in cities and towns nationwide.
“The purpose of the ‘bleeding strike’ is to remember the martyrs who died in the struggle for democracy,” a protest participant from Yangon said.
“We should not be happy during this festival time. We have to feel sadness for the martyrs who are bleeding and we must continue to fight this battle in any way we can,” the protester said.
In Mandalay, red paint was also spilled on the streets amid signs saying: “Hope our military dictatorship fails,” “Overthrow the era of fear” and “Blood has not dried on the streets.”
Protesters spray-painted a pavement red in a Yangon suburb and left a note that read: “Dear UN, How are you? I hope you are well. As for Myanmar, we are dying.”
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on Tuesday said that Myanmar could be spiraling toward a “full-blown” Syrian-style conflict.
Flagging of possible crimes against humanity, Bachelet urged countries to take immediate action to push Myanmar’s military to stop its “campaign of repression and slaughter of its people.”
“I fear the situation in Myanmar is heading towards a full-blown conflict,” she said in a statement.
“There are clear echoes of Syria in 2011,” she said, referring to the start of a civil war that over the past decade has killed about 400,000 people and forced more than 6 million to flee the country.
The bloody crackdown has brought widespread international condemnation and calls for restraint, as well as sanctions from some countries on the Myanmar armed forces and their extensive business interests.
However, diplomatic bickering has stalled concrete action, with the EU’s top diplomat blaming Moscow and Beijing for blocking tough measures, such as a UN arms embargo.
Elsewhere, protesters in Monywa, Sagaing and Dawei cities and small towns in the Mandalay region rallied on motorbikes carrying red flags of Aung San Suu Kyi’s political party.
At a military tribunal in Yangon, seven protesters accused over the murder of a suspected informer were sentenced to death, state media said on Tuesday.
Three of the demonstrators were tried in absentia.
The junta on Tuesday also announced that dozens more people had been added to an arrest warrant list of 260 celebrities, doctors and ordinary citizens.
Many are accused of spreading dissent against the military, while medical professionals are wanted over their work at private clinics, which have taken in injured protesters, state media said.
In the northwestern Sagaing region, a couple were shot dead while delivering milk after junta troops stormed the town of Tamu, local monitoring group the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners said.
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