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Calls grow for probe into police violence at Myanmar mine

hokkien

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
20121201_180007_afp_mines_monks.jpg

Saturday, Dec 01, 2012
MONYWA, Myanmar - Buddhist monks marched in Myanmar's two biggest cities on Saturday to protest at police violence during a crackdown on demonstrators at a copper mine, while Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and a rights group called for an official inquiry.

Activists said at least 50 people had been injured on Thursday, including more than 20 monks who had ended up in hospital, after riot police raided camps set up round the Monywa copper mine by villagers protesting against their forced eviction to make way for an expansion of the project.

Police used tear gas, water cannon and, according to activists, incendiary devices that local media described as"phosphorous bombs". Many of the injured suffered serious burns.

Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at US-based Human Rights Watch, called for a speedy, impartial investigation by the government.

"A hospital ward full of horribly burned Buddhist monks and other protesters deserve to know who attacked them while they were sleeping and what the government is going to do about it,"he said.

"The crackdown ... is a fundamental test case for the government's commitment to peaceful assembly and willingness to demand accountability for abuses," he added.

Myanmar was ruled by a military junta for almost half a century until March 2011, but since then a quasi-civilian government under President Thein Sein has pushed through a series of political and economic reforms, leading Western states to ease sanctions.

Suu Kyi, who led the fight for democracy under the junta and is now a member of parliament, went to the Monywa area in the northwestern region of Sagaing to speak to locals on the day of the police raid. On Friday she also called for an inquiry.

"I think the people have the right to know why such violent measures were taken," she told a news conference. "I think it is needed to apologise to the monks."

She said she had called on the authorities to release any monks who had been detained, but had been told there were no arrests.

A police officer in Monywa, who declined to be named, said arrangements were being made for a formal apology but he declined to give further details.

Around 40 monks accompanied by about 60 other people staged a peaceful march around the Sule Pagoda in the commercial capital, Yangon, a focal point for monk-led protests in 2007 that were brutally put down by the junta.

They walked past the offices of the military-owned Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings Ltd, a partner in the copper mine project with a unit of China North Industries Corp, a Chinese weapons manufacturer.

At the same time, at least 100 monks demonstrated in the second city, Mandalay.

Rallies have been held at the Monywa copper mine, Myanmar's biggest, for more than three months and have been seen as a test both of the new regime's willingness to allow peaceful protest and its attitude to land grabs.

Local residents say the US$1 billion mine expansion entails the unlawful confiscation of more than 7,800 acres (3,160 hectares) of land. They told Reuters in September that four of 26 villages at the project site had already been displaced, along with monasteries and schools.

State television said just before the crackdown that all project work had been halted since Nov. 18 as a result of the protests.
 

hokkien

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
20121201_201338_afp_minespolice.jpg

Saturday, Dec 01, 2012
MONYWA, Myanmar - Police apologised for injuring scores of monks in a crackdown on a protest at a Chinese-backed copper mine in northern Myanmar, an AFP reporter said Saturday, but tensions over the pre-dawn raid remained high.

About 100 police apologised to 10 monks in Monywa, a town near the controversial mine where the raid occurred on Thursday, the toughest police action against demonstrators since a new reform-minded government took power last year.

A senior police official said "we are sorry for what happened and apologise", according to an AFP reporter at the scene, although it was unclear if the monks accepted the apology for a raid which left 100 injured, many with severe burns.

Activists are calling for work at the mine - a joint venture between Chinese firm Wanbao and military-owned Myanmar Economic Holdings - to be suspended to allow impact studies amid allegations of mass evictions and pollution.

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi visited the area and on Friday demanded an apology for monks hurt in the crackdown, after holding talks with both sides.

But the veteran dissident struck a conciliatory tone towards China and declined to back calls for an immediate halt to work on the mine.

It was unclear exactly what caused the protesters' burns but President Thein Sein's office denied local media allegations that some kind of chemical weapon was used, while state media said tear gas and smoke bombs had been deployed.

Photographs of the injuries have stirred outcry across Myanmar reminding the public of the brutal junta-era security force tactics.

With many monks still being treated in hospital Aye Net, a protest leader in Monywa, said she could not forgive the police despite the apology, telling AFP "I will never forget the scenes of their crackdown".

Protesters allege mass evictions have taken place to make way for the mine while China insists that the contentious points had already been resolved.

In a renewed sign of growing anti-China sentiment around 50 people marched to the Chinese Embassy in Yangon on Saturday.

The mine demonstration echoes fierce opposition to a Chinese-backed mega-dam which saw Thein Sein order the scheme's suspension last year in response to public anger.
 
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