World

Myanmar sees deadliest day since coup as soldiers reportedly kill dozens

As Myanmar's military celebrated the annual Armed Forces Day holiday with a parade on Saturday in the country's capital, soldiers and police elsewhere reportedly killed dozens of people as they suppressed protests in the deadliest bloodletting since last month's coup.

More than 320 protesters confirmed to have been killed since Feb. 1 military coup

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As Myanmar's military celebrated the annual Armed Forces Day holiday with a parade on Saturday in the country's capital, soldiers and police elsewhere reportedly killed dozens of people as they suppressed protests in the deadliest bloodletting since last month's coup.

The online news site Myanmar Now reported late Saturday that the death toll had reached 114. A count issued by an independent researcher in Yangon who has been compiling near-real time death tolls put the total at 107, spread over more than two dozen cities and towns.

Both numbers are higher than all estimates for the previous high on March 14, which ranged from 74 to 90.

Figures collected by the researcher, who asked not to be named for his own security, have generally tallied with the counts issued at the end of each day by the Assistance Association of Political Prisoners, which documents deaths and arrests and is widely seen as a definitive source. The Associated Press is unable to independently confirm the death tolls.

A man holds a National League for Democracy flag during a protest against the military coup, in Yangon, Myanmar, on Saturday. Dozens of protesters were killed in the deadliest day of bloodletting since the Feb. 1 coup. (Reuters)

The killings quickly drew international condemnation, with multiple diplomatic missions to Myanmar releasing statements that mentioned the killing of civilians, including children, on Saturday.

"Canada condemns in the strongest possible terms the military's use of force against protestors that left more than 100 people dead today in Myanmar," Canadian Foreign Minister Marc Garneau said in a statement. "The actions of the junta underscore what the world already knows: the military's brutal seizing of the country's governance is totally illegitimate.

"Canada and its international partners are watching, and those responsible will be held to account."

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken also condemned the violence.

"We are horrified by the bloodshed perpetrated by Burmese security forces, showing that the junta will sacrifice the lives of the people to serve the few," he said in a tweet. "I send my deepest condolences to the victims' families. The courageous people of Burma reject the military's reign of terror."

'Murdering unarmed civilians'

U.S. Ambassador Thomas Vajda said in a statement that "security forces are murdering unarmed civilians."

"These are not the actions of a professional military or police force," he wrote. "Myanmar's people have spoken clearly: They do not want to live under military rule."

The death toll in Myanmar has been steadily rising as authorities grow more forceful with their suppression of opposition to the Feb. 1 coup that ousted the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi. The coup reversed years of progress toward democracy after five decades of military rule.

Up to and including Friday, the Association of Political Prisoners had verified 328 people killed in the post-coup crackdown.

Anti-coup protesters gesture with a three-fingers salute, a symbol of resistance, during a demonstration in Yangon on Saturday. The toll of protesters confirmed killed in Myanmar since last month’s military takeover has reached 320, according to a group that verifies details of deaths and arrests. (The Associated Press)

Junta chief Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing did not directly refer to the protest movement when he gave his nationally televised Armed Forces Day speech before thousands of soldiers in Naypyitaw. He referred only to "terrorism which can be harmful to state tranquillity and social security," calling it unacceptable.

This year's event was seen as a flashpoint for violence, with demonstrators threatening to double down on their public opposition to the coup with more and bigger demonstrations. The protesters refer to the holiday by its original name, Resistance Day, which marks the beginning of a revolt against Japanese occupation during the Second World War.

State television MRTV on Friday night showed an announcement urging young people — who have been at the forefront of the protests and prominent among the casualties — to learn a lesson from those killed during demonstrations about the danger of being shot in the head or back.

The warning was widely taken as a threat because a great number of the fatalities among protesters have come from being shot in the head, suggesting they have been targeted for death. The announcement suggested that some young people were taking part in protesting as if it were a game, and urged their parents and friends to talk them out of participating.

Anti-coup protesters prepare makeshift bow and arrows to confront police in Thaketa township on Saturday. The head of Myanmar’s junta on Saturday used the occasion of the country’s Armed Forces Day to try to justify the overthrow of the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi as protesters called for even bigger demonstrations. (The Associated Press)

In recent days, the junta has portrayed the demonstrators as the ones perpetrating violence for their sporadic use of Molotov cocktails. On Saturday, some protesters in Yangon were seen carrying bows and arrows. In contrast, security forces have used live ammunition for weeks against what have still been overwhelmingly unarmed and peaceful crowds.

The U.S. Embassy said shots were fired Saturday at its cultural centre in Yangon, but no one was injured.

'This is a day of suffering and mourning'

The military government does not issue regular casualty counts, and when it has released figures, the totals have been a fraction of what independent parties such as the United Nations have reported. It has said its use of force has been justified to stop what it has called rioting.

In his speech on Saturday, Min Aung Hlaing used the occasion to try to justify the overthrow of Suu Kyi's government, accusing it of failing to investigate irregularities in last November's general election, and repeating that his government would hold "a free and fair election" and hand over power afterward.

The military has claimed there were irregularities in the voting rolls for the last election, which Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party won in a landslide.

WATCH | Bob Rae calls for internationally co-ordinated response to coup:

Bob Rae calls for internationally coordinated response to Myanmar coup

4 years ago
Duration 3:47
Bob Rae, Canada's Ambassador to the UN, weighs in on the coup in Myanmar and calls for an internationally coordinated response: "If you have individual countries going off and doing different things, it doesn't have any impact."

The junta detained Suu Kyi on the day it took power and continues to hold her on minor criminal charges while investigating allegations of corruption against her that her supporters dismiss as politically motivated.

Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for New York-based Human Rights Watch, said Saturday's events showed that the military, known in Myanmar as the Tatmadaw, should be prosecuted in international courts of law.

"This is a day of suffering and mourning for the Burmese people, who have paid for the Tatmadaw's arrogance and greed with their lives, time and time again," he said.

Military retaliates against ethnic minority

Myanmar military forces also on Saturday engaged in combat with guerrillas of the Karen ethnic minority, near the country's eastern border with Thailand.

The Karen National Union, the leading political body for the ethnic group, announced that its armed wing, the Karen National Liberation Army, had overrun a small government military outpost and captured eight soldiers.

Tires burn on a street as protests against the military coup continue in Mandalay on Saturday. (Reuters)

In apparent retaliation, government warplanes on Saturday night carried out strikes on Mutraw district, where the KNLA's 5th Brigade that carried out the morning attack is based and where there is also a large civilian settlement. Hsa Moo of the Karen Peace Support Network, who spoke to villagers from there, said the air attack killed two people and wounded two others while also damaging several houses, Some of the survivors fled to the jungle to hide.

The KNU is one of more than a dozen ethnic armed organizations that have been fighting for decades to gain more autonomy from Myanmar's central government. There have been calls for them to band together and lend support to the fight against the country's new ruling junta.

With files from CBC News