YANGON, Sept 28: Crowds taunted soldiers and police who barricaded central Yangon on Friday to prevent more mass protests against Myanmar’s 45 years of military rule and deepening economic hardship.
Potentially deadly games of cat and mouse went on for hours around the barbed-wire barriers in a city terrified of a repeat of 1988, when the army killed an estimated 3,000 people in its ruthless crushing of an uprising.
Few monks were among the crowds taunting and cursing the soldiers. When the troops charged, the protesters vanished into narrow side streets, only to emerge elsewhere to renew their abuse until darkness fell and an overnight curfew loomed.
“We only want democracy,” some yelled in English. Despite the visceral anger in their voices, far fewer protesters turned out in Yangon than earlier in the week.
“May the people who beat monks be struck down by lightning,” others chanted in Burmese a day after soldiers ransacked 10 monasteries and carted off hundreds of the monks who filled five city blocks with their supporters on Monday and Tuesday.
There has been no word on the fate of the detained monks who turned what started as small protests against shock fuel price rises last month into a mass uprising when they lent their huge moral weight to demonstrations against the junta.
However, one monk pumped his fists in defiance at soldiers as a group of protesters carried him above their heads on Friday.
Other monks told foreign Burmese-language broadcasters they were not going to give up. Speaking anonymously, they said a ‘united front’ of clergy, students and activists had been formed to continue the struggle.
Several shots were fired on Friday, but there was no word of more casualties a day after troops swept protesters out of the city centre, giving them 10 minutes to leave or be shot.
The soldiers then pursued knots of demonstrators through the city.
Troops fired on several crowds on Thursday and state-run television admitted nine people were killed. Australian Ambassador Bob Davis told domestic radio that figure should be multiplied several times to get the real toll.
The Hong Kong-based Asian Human Rights Commission said eight people were shot dead in a single incident in the northeastern Yangon district of South Okkalapa.
Loudspeaker trucks toured South Okkalapa on Friday, announcing a four-hour extension in the area to the curfew imposed on Yangon and the second city of Mandalay on Tuesday.
One of those killed on Thursday was Japanese video journalist Kenji Nagai, 50, shot point-blank -- according to video footage -- when soldiers charged crowds near Sule Pagoda, focus of more than a week of protests and now deep inside the sealed off area.Japan said it would send an envoy to Myanmar at the weekend to investigate the killing.
The junta appeared to have cut off public access to the internet.
The junta agreed to admit UN special envoy Ibrahim Gambari and diplomatic sources in Yangon said he was expected to arrive from Singapore on Saturday.
It told diplomats summoned to capital Naypyidaw that it was “committed to showing restraint in its response to the provocations.”—Reuters































