Buddhist monks march in protest in Yangon. More than 100,000 people flooded the streets of Myanmar's biggest city, joining Buddhist monks in the strongest show of dissent against the ruling generals in nearly two decades.(AFP)
YANGON (AFP) — More than 100,000 people flooded the streets of Myanmar's biggest city Monday, joining Buddhist monks in the strongest show of dissent against the ruling generals in nearly two decades.
The enormous show of strength drew a swift threat from the military government to "take action" against the monks, even as world leaders urged the junta to show restraint in dealing with the protests.
Two major marches snaked their way through the nation's commercial capital led by robed monks chanting prayers of peace and compassion, witnesses said.
Some of the people marched through the rain under a banner reading: "This is a peaceful mass movement." Others had tears in their eyes.
The protests lasted nearly five hours, ending with prayers at pagodas before the crowds returned to their homes.
Political dissidents based in Thailand said major protests also took place in Myanmar's second city of Mandalay, the western oil town of Sittwe, and the religious centre of Pakokku, but the reports were difficult to confirm.
In the first official reaction to a week of escalating protests led by the monks, state media reported that the religion minister, Brigadier General Thura Myint Maung, had issued a warning to senior clergy.
"If the monks go against the rules and regulations in the authority of the Buddhist teachings, we will take action under the existing law," state television quoted the minister as saying.
The threat came as the international community urged restraint by the junta on the eve of the opening of the UN General Assembly in New York, where world leaders are expected to push the generals to adopt democratic reforms.
"We are consulting with allies and friends in the regions on ways to encourage dialogue between the regime and those seeking freedom," said US national security spokesman Gordon Johndroe.
Germany and France added their voices to the chorus, with the foreign ministry in Paris warning that the junta would be held accountable if there were any harsh crackdowns on the streets of major cities.
Closer to home, Malaysian lawmakers urged the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to use its influence to push Myanmar, itself a member of the regional bloc, to reform.
The generals have normally been tough on dissent, and their 1988 crackdown left hundreds if not thousands dead.
But Monday's rally was the latest in more than a month of growing demonstrations against the junta since a massive fuel price hike triggered public anger.
The monks and supporters set off from holy Shwedagon Pagoda and walked past the offices of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD), which won elections in 1990 but was never allowed to govern.
NLD officials came out to join the marchers, many of whom fixed small strips of the coloured cloth of the monks' robes onto their own shirts, in a procession that quickly swelled to more than 30,000 people.
"We are marching for the people," one monk told the crowd.
A second march estimated at up to 100,000 people headed north of the city, drawing in ever more as it marched past the now-shuttered campus of a university that was the scene of the 1988 uprising.
It appeared to stretch for as long as a kilometre (more than half a mile), blocking traffic on one of the city's major thoroughfares.
The British ambassador in Yangon, Mark Canning, said the country's leaders were now in uncharted territory and doubted that the protests would fizzle out.
"You could see a sharp reaction from the government, which is more likely," he told AFP.
"The obvious way out of this is to sit down with the various elements that are involved in all this and try and reach some sort of common ground."
Analysts believe the junta has thus far held back because any violence against the monks in this devoutly Buddhist nation would spark a huge outcry.
In a surprise move on Saturday, armed police allowed about 2,000 monks and civilians to pray outside the home of democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, long the face of resistance to the generals, who have ruled here since 1962.
The Nobel Peace Prize laureate stepped outside the lakeside home where she has been under house arrest for more than a decade and greeted the crowd, but riot police have blocked the road since Sunday.
Prominent democracy activists initially led the rallies but the generals arrested more than 200 people, according to human rights groups.
The enormous show of strength drew a swift threat from the military government to "take action" against the monks, even as world leaders urged the junta to show restraint in dealing with the protests.
Two major marches snaked their way through the nation's commercial capital led by robed monks chanting prayers of peace and compassion, witnesses said.
Some of the people marched through the rain under a banner reading: "This is a peaceful mass movement." Others had tears in their eyes.
The protests lasted nearly five hours, ending with prayers at pagodas before the crowds returned to their homes.
Political dissidents based in Thailand said major protests also took place in Myanmar's second city of Mandalay, the western oil town of Sittwe, and the religious centre of Pakokku, but the reports were difficult to confirm.
In the first official reaction to a week of escalating protests led by the monks, state media reported that the religion minister, Brigadier General Thura Myint Maung, had issued a warning to senior clergy.
"If the monks go against the rules and regulations in the authority of the Buddhist teachings, we will take action under the existing law," state television quoted the minister as saying.
The threat came as the international community urged restraint by the junta on the eve of the opening of the UN General Assembly in New York, where world leaders are expected to push the generals to adopt democratic reforms.
"We are consulting with allies and friends in the regions on ways to encourage dialogue between the regime and those seeking freedom," said US national security spokesman Gordon Johndroe.
Germany and France added their voices to the chorus, with the foreign ministry in Paris warning that the junta would be held accountable if there were any harsh crackdowns on the streets of major cities.
Closer to home, Malaysian lawmakers urged the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to use its influence to push Myanmar, itself a member of the regional bloc, to reform.
The generals have normally been tough on dissent, and their 1988 crackdown left hundreds if not thousands dead.
But Monday's rally was the latest in more than a month of growing demonstrations against the junta since a massive fuel price hike triggered public anger.
The monks and supporters set off from holy Shwedagon Pagoda and walked past the offices of Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD), which won elections in 1990 but was never allowed to govern.
NLD officials came out to join the marchers, many of whom fixed small strips of the coloured cloth of the monks' robes onto their own shirts, in a procession that quickly swelled to more than 30,000 people.
"We are marching for the people," one monk told the crowd.
A second march estimated at up to 100,000 people headed north of the city, drawing in ever more as it marched past the now-shuttered campus of a university that was the scene of the 1988 uprising.
It appeared to stretch for as long as a kilometre (more than half a mile), blocking traffic on one of the city's major thoroughfares.
The British ambassador in Yangon, Mark Canning, said the country's leaders were now in uncharted territory and doubted that the protests would fizzle out.
"You could see a sharp reaction from the government, which is more likely," he told AFP.
"The obvious way out of this is to sit down with the various elements that are involved in all this and try and reach some sort of common ground."
Analysts believe the junta has thus far held back because any violence against the monks in this devoutly Buddhist nation would spark a huge outcry.
In a surprise move on Saturday, armed police allowed about 2,000 monks and civilians to pray outside the home of democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, long the face of resistance to the generals, who have ruled here since 1962.
The Nobel Peace Prize laureate stepped outside the lakeside home where she has been under house arrest for more than a decade and greeted the crowd, but riot police have blocked the road since Sunday.
Prominent democracy activists initially led the rallies but the generals arrested more than 200 people, according to human rights groups.
19 comments:
NO DEMAND, NO JUSTICE.
THIS WHEN PEOPLE COMES TOGETHER.
THE REAL COWARD GET QUIET.
1:46AM you not see the real coward yet! The real coward use gun! boy!
In Cambodia Khmer-People will stand up like Burmese.
The small people will lead the fight , but guess what ?
The King and his family will not move and keep quiet in their turtle shell because they know the next trend of new Cambodia will have no place for their rotten Monarchy.
Jayo FREE CAMBODIA !
Ar Yuon-Hanoi go Home !
Jayo Khmer Sralanh Khmer !
All of ya just shut the fuck up why don't you jayo in cambodia? I'm sure you'll get your ass shoot
We'll fuck Yuon-Hanoi ass hole until they get out from Cambodia !
Why are you so nervous ?
Pls count your days when it'll become very soon ; and let see where are you going & hiding ?
You are right 3:11AM, that why we fuck you CPP up by writing so can you get us now? Good luck the son of PHD msde from Vietname! hA!has!haha!
Look at The CPP's kids.
Recently they killed each other in the street of Nom Benh....the Wild Animal in the Jungle of CPP ruling.
Their times are running out.
It's a tyrany regime,Khmer people will kich them out soon with their Boss,Youn Hanoi.Wait and See it.
God bless those Monks and their followers for showing their strenghts against evil and corruptor of so called Government.
Cambodia Buddhist Monk in Cambodia, please follow and lead the people to peace and real prosperity!!!
God bless political monks? Who said? I bet it came directly from Hollywood/yale/.../ or shit like that.
AH Skin-head Tra-Ngol Fake Monks Tep vong and Lon Nget will be happy to be sent to Burma to help the coward Military Junta crack down the real monks who are protesting for democracy.
FYI, stupid, protesting for democracy is no monk's job. You must have got this idea from your stupid hollywood movie. Am I wrong?
It's in the human nature, folks! Where there is suppression, there will be resistance. It's just a matter of time. No dictators can last forever. Examples? Pinochet, Suharto, Marcos, and a host of communist heads in Eastern Europe. Or, they would die before their time has come (Stalin, Mao Tse Tong).
And, no fake monks (the like of Tep Vong, Lon Nget) can hide behind Buddha's robe and serve the CPP politics for long. I bet both fake monks have already sent a photo, showing a Cambodian military police kicked a Buddhist monk during a peaceful protest in Phnom Penh, to the Burmese military junta with a suggestion on how to deal with such a situation.
As far as the Burmese Buddhist monks are concerned, it is all about justice and compassion that the military junta is lacking. They just demand an official apology from the government who treats its own people with cruelty and inhumanity.
Any such frequent references to hollywood movies can only come from a movie addict with little clue of the world outside his TV screen.
At the rate they are plundering and exploiting their own country and people, it will not be long before it all will implode because of their greeds. Pretty soon, they will get suffocated and tired of callin evry single idiots "oknha,samdech" without any real substance behind those titles. It will start when, even with the way they inter-married for the sake of preserving their ill-gotten power and wealth, they get tired of seeing each other's uglyness, and long for changes and differences - then we will see the power struggle from within.
10:11, we did you see that the Burmese Government mistreated their people. Was there any mass grave found somewhere or something? Don't tell me that you didn't got that story from your stupid TV or Hollywood program. I bet you guys is praying for Steven Seagal to come to rescue those people right now. Am I wrong?
correction to post 12:27:
10:11, where did you see that the Burmese Government mistreated their people?
12:30PM
Don't be too lazy. For online news, goto the BBC or CNN websites. If you want to see for yourself, go to Thailand-Burma (Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai) border and you will see the refugees there. Or, go and ask the Nobel Prize Institute to find out why they awarded Nobel Peace Prize to Aung San Suu Kyi (if you have ever heard of her name).
Another thing is there is a difference between mistreatment (suffering on the edge of death) and killing (there would be mass grave). Watch less movies and get some education, dude!
Shit dude, you are talking about a bunch of greedy and paranoid people who hate communist government.
Hey, I don't mind that they fled the country and try to do better in Thailand or elsewhere. People all over are doing this, in case you didn't know, including Cambodia as well as Laos. Who are you trying to kid here?
As for Nobel prize craps, it sounds a bit like what you said about our PM received honorable degree from Vietnam. It has no meaning to me; get it? Furthermore, I am not aware of any accomplishment made by the bitch for Burma except to cause innocent people to get kill.
We should learn how to stand up like the Burma monks.
Sure, and be killed just like them (political monks).
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