Boycott and bombings mar Myanmar's new school year
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[June 02, 2021]
(Reuters) - No more than a quarter
of Myanmar's more than 12 million pupils enrolled for the new school
year amid a protest boycott against military rule and in the wake of a
series of bombings, an official of a teachers' group said.
There were noticeably fewer students at many schools in the main city of
Yangon as the new academic year began on Tuesday for the first time
since both the Feb. 1 coup and the relaxation of curbs imposed last year
against the spread of COVID-19.
Security forces stood guard at some schools and brought pupils under
armed escort from their homes.
An official of the Myanmar Teachers’ Federation, who sought anonymity
for fear of retribution, said that even fewer puplis had turned out than
had been enrolled because parents were concerned about security, as well
as joining the boycott.
Teachers were also afraid, he said, adding, "Some teachers go to school
in normal clothing and change into their uniforms only inside the
school."
Schools have become another battleground for protest against the junta
that seized power on Feb. 1, arresting elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi
and cutting short a decade of tentative democratic reforms.
Reuters was unable to reach either the junta or its education ministry
for comment.
The junta-controlled Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper quoted Win
Win Nwe, the headmistress of a school in Yangon's Kamayut township, as
saying that about 30% of pupils had been enrolled there.
"The teachers, security members and town elders will provide security
for the students," it quoted her as saying.
FRONT LINE
Teachers and students have been on the front line of anti-junta protests
and the teachers' federation said more than 125,000 teachers, from a
total of more than 430,000, had been suspended for joining a civil
disobedience movement.
The phrase, "We're not sending our children to school," has been
trending on social media since mid-May.
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Students hold a banner and flash the three-finger salute as they
take part in a protest against Myanmar’s junta, in Mandalay, Myanmar
May 10, 2021. REUTERS/Stringer
One mother, Thinn Thinn Hlaing, posted that her
children would not be sent to school, to show sympathy for parents
whose children were killed in the protests, as well as to show
respect for striking teachers and to resist the system, out of fear
of a new wave of coronavirus and because of bombings near schools.
"All mothers, please keep fighting," posted Su Mon Han, another
mother who planned to teach her seven-year-old son at home.
None of the parents Reuters spoke to who were sending children to
school was willing to discuss the matter.
The junta complained that "politically extreme terrorist groups, who
wish to destroy national interests" had been threatening pupils and
teachers to disrupt education.
Between May 1 and May 26, there were 115 bombings or bombing
attempts and 18 arson attacks at educational establishments, it said
in a statement.
A National Unity Government set up underground by junta opponents
has said it is working on a mobile education project, despite tough
internet restrictions since the coup.
At least 57 of the 841 people recorded killed by security forces
since the coup were under 18, says an activist group, the Assistance
Association for Political Prisoners. The army says the total of
those killed is much lower.
(Reporting by Reuters staff; Editing by Matthew Tostevin and
Clarence Fernandez)
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