(Yangon) Three days after the uprising that toppled the Aung San Suu Kyi government, Facebook services, a key communication tool in Burma, were damaged on Thursday, and calls continue to be heard to prevent the uprising.
The military on Monday ended the country’s tumultuous democratic transition, declared a state of emergency for a year and arrested Aung San Suu Kyi and other officials from his party, the National League for Democracy (LND).
According to her movement, the 75-year-old leader, who is under house arrest in the capital Naypyidaw, has been charged with violating a vague trade rule.
For almost 50 years since independence in 1948, under the guise of military dictatorship, the fear of revenge has been strong.
Signs of resistance against Putin, which the United Nations has strongly condemned, called on the international community to come together to make it fail.
On Wednesday evening, in the commercial capital Yangon, the financial capital, residents honored their horns and, for the second evening in a row, beat on pots and pans, with some chanting: “Mother Sue! (Aung San Suu Kyi).
Health experts led the protest, with dozens of organizations across the country refusing to operate “under illegal military authority”.
Some protested wearing red ribbons in NLD colors, while others saluted with three fingers, a gesture of resistance already adopted by pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong or Thailand.
Groups calling for “civil disobedience” have also been created on Facebook, where the majority of the population is the gateway to the Internet.
The U.S. company said Thursday it had disrupted some of its services. “We urge authorities to restore the connection so that residents can communicate with their families and friends and get important information,” a spokesman for the forum told AFP.
The Norwegian company Telnor, one of the country’s leading telecommunications providers, has confirmed that authorities have issued orders to “temporarily block” Facebook. We had to cut but “we don’t think this is a measure […] The company added either “according to international law”.
Military officials have already issued a warning to the public not to say or publish anything that “promotes riots or instability.”
The UN is raising its voice
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Wednesday that he would do everything in his power to “put enough pressure on Burma to mobilize all the key players and the international community to see that the uprising fails.”
In an interview with the Washington Post, Guterres ruled that “changing the outcome of the election and the will of the people is completely unacceptable” and that the UN Security Council could not agree with the general statement.
The council met urgently on Tuesday without reaching an agreement. Negotiations are still ongoing, according to the diplomat, on the anonymous situation.
To receive it, a simple text requires Beijing’s support, which vetoes it as a permanent member of the Security Council.
However, Burma’s main support for China at the United Nations has been to block any initiative during the Rohingya crisis, believing that the conflict with the Muslim minority during the Rohingya crisis was a matter of Burmese internal affairs.
On Wednesday, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman called on the international community to “create a healthy external environment in which Burma can resolve its differences properly, and any intervention by the Security Council should” not exacerbate the problems and complicate the situation further. ”
Personal ambition
The Burmese army chief, Min Aung Hling, won a landslide victory over the LND by inciting massive fraud in the November legislative elections, but the election went off without much trouble. International observers.
In fact, analysts say the generals fear that their influence will wane after the acclaimed Aung San Suu Kyi victory in her country, despite having a very favorable constitution.
They said Min Aung Hling, who was internationally expelled from the Rohingya crisis, was ousted from personal political ambition when the leader was nearing retirement.
The 1991 Nobel Peace Prize laureate was charged with violating Burmese import and export law, the NLD said, after authorities found unregistered walkie-talkies in her home.
An equally vague allegation has been leveled against former President Win Mint, who is being prosecuted for violating the country’s disaster management law by failing to comply with coronavirus measures.
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