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'Silent strike' against junta empties Myanmar streets

AFP . Yangon
10 Dec 2021 17:27:07 | Update: 10 Dec 2021 18:07:43
'Silent strike' against junta empties Myanmar streets
An empty street is pictured as demonstrators called for a "silent strike" in protest against the military coup in Yangon on December 10, 2021. — AFP Photo

Myanmar anti-coup demonstrators staged a "silent strike" Friday, closing businesses and emptying the streets of cities and towns across the country to protest against military rule. 

The Southeast Asian nation has been in turmoil since the February coup, with the economy in tatters and more than 1,300 people killed by security forces, according to a local monitoring group.

The streets of downtown Yangon -- Myanmar's commercial hub -- were deserted, with no street vendors and little traffic, AFP correspondents said.

The famous Shwedagon pagoda, a Buddhist site usually bustling with visitors and pilgrims, was also quiet.

"Restaurants, shops, and the main market are all closed," a resident of second city Mandalay told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"There have been no street vendors since this morning, no early morning walkers."

Pictures in local media also showed empty streets in the southeastern city of Mawlamyine and in towns across the northern Sagaing region.

The US embassy in Yangon advised its citizens to stay off the streets Friday, citing a heightened risk of violence by security forces against any gatherings or protests.

At 4:00pm local time some Yangon neighbourhoods resounded to the noise of mass clapping to mark the end of the strike.

Mass demonstrations that rocked Myanmar's cities and towns immediately after Aung San Suu Kyi was ousted in February were met by a brutal and indiscriminate crackdown by the military.

Those still taking to the streets to protest now do so in smaller flashmobs lasting just minutes in order to avoid arrest. 

Myanmar soldiers rammed a car into one such rally in Yangon last Sunday, killing five people, according to local media.

The junta said only three protesters were injured.

On Monday a junta court jailed Suu Kyi for two years for incitement against the military and flouting coronavirus restrictions during elections her party won last year.

She faces a raft of other charges, including violating the official secrets act, corruption and electoral fraud, and faces decades in prison if convicted on all counts.

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