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BBC journalist ‘missing’ as junta crackdown triggers Yangon exodus


Bangladeshpost
Published : 19 Mar 2021 09:53 PM | Updated : 20 Mar 2021 12:46 AM

AFP, Yangon

A Burmese journalist with the BBC’s Myanmar language news service went “missing” on Friday, as civilians fled the coup-hit country’s largest city after the junta’s deadly crackdown on dissent.

Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, triggering a mass uprising that security forces have sought to crush with a campaign of violence and fear.

The junta has also gone after the country’s press corps, revoking the licenses of five independent local broadcasting services, raiding newsrooms, and arresting journalists working to cover the news.

On Friday, the BBC’s official press Twitter account released a statement on its “missing” journalist, Aung Thura.

“We are extremely concerned about our BBC News Burmese Reporter, Aung

Thura, who was taken away by unidentified men,” it said.

The British broadcaster said he disappeared around midday, and that it was

doing everything it could to locate him.

“We call on the authorities to help locate him and confirm that he is

safe,” the statement added.

Local media outlet Mizzima also said that one of its reporters, Than Htike

Aung, was “arrested” in the capital Naypyidaw on Friday, according to its

official Facebook page.

The two reporters were together when they were taken.

Since the coup, more than 30 journalists have been arrested, according to

the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners monitoring group.

Among the detained is Thein Zaw, a photojournalist with the Associated

Press, who has been charged with “causing fear, spreading false news or

agitating directly or indirectly a government employee”.

Even as security forces have deployed tear gas, rubber bullets and live

rounds to quell dissent, demonstrators across the country have pushed on to

demand a return to democracy.

On Friday, at least two more protesters were killed in a small trading

town in northeastern Myanmar, a funeral home employee told AFP by phone.

He added that more had died, but “we have not picked up the bodies because

there is still shooting”.

In neighbouring Kayah state, a bystander was killed when security forces

opened fire on a protest, a rescue worker told AFP.

The fresh violence brings the death toll in Myanmar since the coup to near

230, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners

monitoring group.

Yangon, Myanmar’s former capital and commercial hub, remains one of the

key spots of unrest — with the junta imposing martial law over six townships

this week.

The move effectively puts nearly two million people under the direct

control of military commanders.

But much of Yangon has descended into chaos, with security forces

patrolling and opening fire randomly in residential areas — like Tamwe and

Thaketa, both hard-hit protest areas, on Friday.

A Facebook video shot by a Tamwe resident — verified by AFP — showed

dozens of soldiers and police opening fire repeatedly and slowly stalking

down a street as they shouted at people to “come out”.

“We will turn your whole quarter into a pile of ash!” they threatened. “Do

you want to see your whole quarter turned into a pile of ash?”

Several terrified residents told AFP they have either left Yangon already

or are planning to leave for rural areas.

“I no longer feel safe and secure anymore — some nights I am not able to

sleep,” a resident near one of the districts where security forces have

killed protesters this week told AFP.

“I am very worried that the worst will happen next.”

One resident told AFP he feared being shot by security forces, who had

been threatening people if they did not clear barricades.

“We are like house rats searching for something to eat in another person’s

kitchen,” said one man who described the fear of leaving his house this week

to get milk for his two children.

Mobile data across Myanmar has also been down since Monday, plunging those

without Wifi into an information blackout.

Foreign ambassadors — including the US and former colonial power Britain

— said Friday in a statement that the “brutal violence against unarmed

civilians… is immoral and indefensible”.

Across the Myanmar border in Thailand’s Tak province, authorities said

they were preparing shelters for an influx of potential refugees.

“If many Myanmar people flow across the border because of an urgent case,

we have prepared the measures… to receive them,” said provincial governor

Pongrat Piromrat.

He said Tak province would be able to support about 30,000 to 50,000

people, though he confirmed that no one appears to have flooded across the

border yet.

About 90,000 refugees from Myanmar already live along the porous border,

fleeing decades of civil war between the military and ethnic armed groups.

The junta has repeatedly justified the power seizure by alleging

widespread electoral fraud in November’s elections, which Suu Kyi’s National

League for Democracy (NLD) party swept in a landslide.