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The Myanmar military is shirking responsibility for the death toll issue in the process of suppressing the protests condemning the coup. It is analyzed that foreign companies have taken a step forward to ‘run the water’ after successively suspending agreements with companies involved in the military and the sanctions movements of the governments of each country intensified.
According to local media such as Irrawaddy on the 23rd, the Myanmar police refuse to investigate an investigation into vigilantes in their 30s who died after being shot on the 19th.
Witnesses reported that there were clashes between military supporters and vigilantes on alert just before the incident, and then three shots were heard after a vehicle carrying three policemen and two armed soldiers arrived at the scene.
The dead guard’s father told Irrawaddy: “I went to the police and told Irrawaddy not to ask for an investigation, saying,” No one can be blamed for this incident. “
There were situations where the protesters first raped and deny that self-defense is inevitable or that it is not their job.
On the 9th, a doctor who treated Mia Tuwe Tuwe Cain (20, female), who was shot to death during a protest in the capital Naepido, told CNN that day that “it is true that Cain was killed with live ammunition. “The pieces of lead found in the head of the police are not bullets used by the police,” he denied.
The Myanmar Political Offender Support Association (AAPP) announced that 684 people were arrested as of the 22nd after the outbreak of the coup, of which 637 are in custody.
International pressure on the Myanmar military is increasing. In a statement issued today with the high-level representatives of the seven major countries (G7), “I strongly condemn the Myanmar military for raping the protesters.” “The Myanmar military refrains from (violence) and respects human rights and international law. Do it.” He urged.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the United States Department of the Treasury sanctioned 10 people who were leading the coup, including Supreme Commander Min Aung Hlaing and Deputy Commander Soe Yun, and placed two high-ranking generals. additional rank on the sanctions list on the 22nd. US Secretary of State Tony Blincoln warned that “we will not hesitate to take further action against those who commit violence and oppress the will of the people.”
Reporter Jo Seong-eun [email protected]
GoodNews paper ⓒ Kookmin Ilbo (www.kmib.co.kr), unauthorized reproduction, compilation, redistribution prohibited
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