World

Civil disobedience calls sprout in Myanmar after coup

Calls for protest go out on social media as activists launch Facebook group

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 03 Feb 2021 1:00PM

Civil disobedience calls sprout in Myanmar after coup
Signs of public anger and plans to resist have begun to surface, especially online, after Myanmar was plunged back into direct military rule with the military arrest of Aung San Suu Kyi and other civilian leaders in a series of dawn raids on Monday. – AFP pic, February 3, 2021

YANGON – Calls for a civil disobedience campaign in Myanmar were gathering pace today as the United States formally declared the military’s takeover a coup and vowed further penalties for the generals behind the putsch.

Myanmar was plunged back into direct military rule when soldiers detained Aung San Suu Kyi and other civilian leaders in a series of dawn raids on Monday, ending the country’s brief experiment with democracy.

Suu Kyi, who has not been seen in public since the coup, won a huge landslide with her National League for Democracy last November but the military – whose favoured parties received a drubbing – declared the polls were fraudulent.

With soldiers back on the streets of major cities, the takeover has not been met by any major protests.

But signs of public anger and plans to resist have begun to surface, especially online.

The clatter of pots and pans – and the honking of car horns – rang out across the country’s biggest city Yangon yesterday evening after calls for protest went out on social media.

Activists also launched a “Civil Disobedience Movement” Facebook group to declare opposition and share ideas. By this morning, some 24 hours after its launch, it had nearly 150,000 followers.

Army chief Min Aung Hlaing appointed himself head of a new cabinet stacked with former and current generals, justifying his coup yesterday as the “inevitable” result of civilian leaders’ failure to heed the army’s fraud warnings.

The military declared a one-year state of emergency and said it would hold new elections once their allegations of voter irregularities were addressed and investigated.

The move stunned Myanmar, a country left impoverished by decades of junta misrule before it began taking steps towards a more democratic and civilian-led government ten years ago.

Doctors and nurses were among professionals making early declarations of their intent to go on strike.

“We will only follow and obey the orders from our democratically elected government,” a statement from medics posted overnight on the Civil Disobedience Movement page read. 

But protesting against Myanmar's military is fraught with risk. 

During junta rule, dissent was quashed with thousands of activists – including Suu Kyi – detained for years on end. 

Censorship was pervasive and the military frequently deployed lethal force during periods of political turmoil, most notably during huge protests in 1988 and 2007.

This morning the official Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper published a warning from the Information Ministry against opposing the coup. 

“Some of the media organisations and people are posting rumours on social media, releasing statements to occur riot and unstable situation,” the English language statement read. 

It called on people “not to make such moves and to cooperate with the government in accordance with existing laws”. – AFP, February 3, 2021

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