Myanmar
police beat students, journalists, monks, detain about 100
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[March 10, 2015]
By Soe Zeya Tun
LETPADAN, Myanmar (Reuters) - - Myanmar
police beat students, monks and journalists with batons and detained
about 100 people on Tuesday as they broke up protesters calling for
academic freedom who had been locked in a standoff with security forces
for more than a week, a Reuters witness said.
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About 200 students and supporters have been protesting against an
education bill they say stifles academic independence. They had
planned to walk from the central city of Mandalay to the commercial
hub of Yangon, but were blocked by police in Letpadan, about 140 km
(90 miles) to the north of Yangon.
Police, who also traded slingshot fire with protesters, had said
they would allow the students to continue their march on Tuesday,
but that agreement fell apart.
Yangon is the site of numerous student-led demonstrations, including
those in 1988 that sparked a pro-democracy movement that spread
throughout the country before being brutally suppressed by the
military government.
A semi-civilian reformist government took power in 2011 after 49
years of military rule and its response to the current protests has
been more muted.
The witness saw about 100 protesters locked in two police trucks,
while others fled the town and some were chased into a Buddhist
temple.
The Delegation of the European Union, which has been training the
police in crowd management, condemned the crackdown, saying in a
statement that it “deeply regrets the use of force against peaceful
demonstrators”.
The Interim Myanmar Press Council said it was filing a complaint,
protesting “in the strongest terms against the arrest of reporters”
and calling for their release, without saying how many journalists
were detained.
Police and government spokesmen were not available for comment. The
Information Ministry posted photos on its Facebook page showing
student protesters tearing down police barricades and noted that the
protesters removed them “with force”.
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Student leaders rejected the suggestion that they had instigated the
violence.
"It hurts my heart whenever they do this to us students, but for
sure we will never use violence,” said Lin Htet Naing of the All
Burma Federation of Student Unions.
Lin Htet Naing’s wife, a former political prisoner of the previous
military regime, was among those arrested in Letpadan while he led a
brief protest in Yangon on Tuesday.
About 100 protesters were met in the street in Yangon by a larger
number of police who grabbed one protester and beat him. Police said
they would release him if the protesters dispersed, which they did.
(Writing by Jared Ferrie; Additional reporting by Aung Hla Tun,
Minzayar Oo and Jared Ferrie in YANGON; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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