Myanmar protesters vow to keep up action

Relatives cry as they look at the body of Su Su Kyi, who was shot in a car on her way home from work at South Korea's Shinhan Bank, during her funeral at Yayway cemetery in Yangon, Myanmar on Friday.
Relatives cry as they look at the body of Su Su Kyi, who was shot in a car on her way home from work at South Korea's Shinhan Bank, during her funeral at Yayway cemetery in Yangon, Myanmar on Friday.
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Reuters :
Opponents of military rule in Myanmar marched, observed strikes and sought alternative ways to communicate after most users were cut off from the internet on Friday, undaunted by the bloody suppression of protests during the past two months.
Hundreds of people have been killed demonstrating since the Feb 1 coup, and many people have been using social media to publicise the security forces’ excesses and to organise against military rule.
The authorities, who have already shut down mobile data, ordered internet providers from Friday to cut wireless broadband, depriving most customers of access. In response, anti-coup groups have shared radio frequencies, mobile apps such as maps that work without a data connection, and tips for using SMS messages as an alternative to data services to communicate.
“In the following days, there are street protests. Do as many guerrilla strikes as you can. Please join,” Khin Sadar, a protest leader, said on Facebook in anticipation of the internet blackout, referring to quick protests in unexpected places that break up when the security forces appear.
“Let’s listen to the radio again. Let’s make phone calls to each other too.”
The military did not announce or explain its order to providers to cut wireless broadband. Internet was available only on fixed lines, rare in Myanmar where most homes and businesses connect through wireless networks.
Authorities have been struggling to stifle an opposition demanding the

 restoration of civilian rule and release of elected government leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other figures.
Violent incidents are occurring regularly in different parts of the country between the security forces and people set against military rule.
In the town of Tamu on the Indian border, a policemen who supported the democracy movement was killed on Friday in a clash with security forces, the Monywa Gazette reported.
Separately, security forces opened fire at a rally near the central city of Mandalay, wounding four people, two critically, according to three domestic media organisations.
In the commercial hub of Yangon, a Myanmar employee of South Korea’s Shinhan Bank died on Friday after being shot in the head while travelling in a minibus two days earlier, the bank said, adding it was discussing the situation with the government.
Adding to the chaos in the former British colony, also known as Burma, hostilities between the armed forces and ethnic minority insurgents have broken out in at least two regions.
Across the country, demonstrators held “flower strikes”, leaving bouquets, some with messages of defiance, at places associated with activists killed by the security forces.
People held up roses while making three-finger salutes, a symbol of resistance. Entire benches were covered in flowers and anti-coup messages.
One arrangement of dandelions and red roses on a lakeside walkway read: “Myanmar is bleeding”.

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