What's new

Welcome

If you already have an account, please login, but if you don't have one yet, you are more than welcome to freely join the community of lawyers around the world..

Register Log in
  • We don't have any responsibilities about the news being sent in this site. Legal News are automatically being collected from sources and submitted in this forum by feed readers. Source of each news is set in the news and a link to its source is always added.
    (Any News older than 21 days from its post time will be deleted automatically!)

Jurist Myanmar protests against military coup resume in defiance of stiffened penal laws after internet blackout lifted

Status
Not open for further replies.
  • Thread starter
  • Staff
  • #1

Dadparvar

Staff member
Nov 11, 2016
10,717
0
6
JURIST EXCLUSIVE – Thousands of citizens took to the streets in Myanmar again Monday to protest the military coup that deposed civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, physically confronting military vehicles sent into several cities yesterday in advance of an 8-hour internet blackout and defying newly-stiffened penal laws threatening dissidents with imprisonment. JURIST’s law student correspondents on the ground reported marches and mass protests in Yangon, the financial hub, and Mandalay, the country’s second-largest city. Protesters faced off against massed military vehicles at several locations, and in Mandalay one of our correspondents said soldiers fired “indiscriminately” to break up a protest Monday afternoon. Earlier, hundreds of university students sat in the streets of the city in peaceful defiance of military authority.

With soldiers and military vehicles in the cities, the situation in Myanmar is unstable, and our correspondents say that the military may be attempting to incite street violence that would give the military regime the excuse to crack down further on the citizenry. One of our law student correspondents writes:

Actually, we are so scared. No one knows when they will shoot with the guns… People are afraid of the soldiers but they pretend like they are not afraid.
The post Myanmar protests against military coup resume in defiance of stiffened penal laws after internet blackout lifted appeared first on JURIST - News - Legal News & Commentary.

Continue reading...

Note: We don't have any responsibilities about this news. Its been posted here by Feed Reader and we had no controls and checking on it. And because News posted here will be deleted automatically after 21 days, threads are closed so that no one spend time to post and discuss here. You can always check the source and discuss in their site.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top