Resistance to Myanmar soldiers Continue
Oct 8th, 2007
AP
Posted: 2007-10-08 04:10:54
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) – Residents of Myanmar’s biggest city, Yangon, are keeping up a low-key resistance against the country’s military regime, harassing soldiers by tossing rocks at them at night, student activists said Monday.
Security forces have responded to the activities, which have taken place over the past two to three days, by detaining the rock throwers they catch after curfew, they said.
In some cases, members of the families of those detained – including children – have also been detained, the activists said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of arrest.
No figures were available on the number of people engaging in such activities or how many may have been detained. The reports came as the government has announced numbers of those detained in connection with the anti-regime protests of the past few weeks.
Myanmar authorities also said weapons had been seized from Buddhist monasteries and announced dozens of new arrests, despite global outrage over the junta’s violent repression of protesters who sought an end to 45 years of military dictatorship.
Recent raids on monasteries turned up 18 knives, one ax, slingshots and one 9mm bullet, though it was not yet clear to whom they belonged, according to state-run The New Light of Myanmar newspaper on Monday. The government threatened to punish any monks that violate the law, stepping up pressure on clerics who led the protests.
In a commentary, the newspaper stressed that those arrested during the unrest would be treated as criminals rather than political prisoners.
“Supporters of the protest who claim themselves pro-democracy activists will not be pardoned if they break the law, as no man is above the law,” the paper said on its comments page. “Those who are found guilty of breaking the law will be imprisoned.”
October 8th, 2007 at 11:57 am
“Recent raids on monasteries turned up 18 knives, one ax, slingshots and one 9mm bullet, though it was not yet clear to whom they belonged, according to state-run The New Light of Myanmar newspaper on Monday. The government threatened to punish any monks that violate the law, stepping up pressure on clerics who led the protests.”
Bullocks! I would say. The dogs may be new but they are old tricks. If they said they have captured cache of guns, heaps of ammunition and so on, I would have believed it (with a kilogram of salt). Slingshots and one 9mm bullet?
Before with their unshameful pampering of some monks may have lended them some sympathy. Now, they might have to convert themselves to another religion (if there is one to bless them for what they are and what they are doing).