The Fort Worth Press - 'Living in a dark era': one year since Myanmar's coup

USD -
AED 3.672995
AFN 72.000312
ALL 90.150063
AMD 391.780643
ANG 1.790208
AOA 916.504871
ARS 1076.134234
AUD 1.624703
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.699023
BAM 1.771301
BBD 2.017534
BDT 121.402308
BGN 1.786775
BHD 0.376938
BIF 2925
BMD 1
BND 1.345771
BOB 6.904859
BRL 5.822695
BSD 0.999221
BTN 86.74138
BWP 14.174576
BYN 3.269895
BYR 19600
BZD 2.007245
CAD 1.40865
CDF 2874.999816
CHF 0.857404
CLF 0.025578
CLP 981.530098
CNY 7.35005
CNH 7.346725
COP 4302.5
CRC 513.965367
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 100.999793
CZK 22.903198
DJF 177.720228
DKK 6.81703
DOP 62.400677
DZD 133.788984
EGP 51.657401
ERN 15
ETB 129.949966
EUR 0.913103
FJD 2.318098
FKP 0.783371
GBP 0.779849
GEL 2.755014
GGP 0.783371
GHS 15.49249
GIP 0.783371
GMD 72.139693
GNF 8659.903642
GTQ 7.716751
GYD 208.983453
HKD 7.761249
HNL 25.762511
HRK 6.885296
HTG 131.560572
HUF 373.602903
IDR 16954.218811
ILS 3.742502
IMP 0.783371
INR 86.266162
IQD 1310.453719
IRR 42123.46439
ISK 132.8094
JEP 0.783371
JMD 157.8948
JOD 0.708988
JPY 147.769829
KES 129.511355
KGS 86.825221
KHR 4003.689294
KMF 450.913463
KPW 900.005689
KRW 1480.009088
KWD 0.308038
KYD 0.829237
KZT 518.462082
LAK 21662.472816
LBP 90161.548349
LKR 297.183167
LRD 200.048677
LSL 19.587586
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.944799
MAD 9.560793
MDL 17.738644
MGA 4683.385645
MKD 56.232333
MMK 2099.508213
MNT 3514.239504
MOP 8.003826
MRU 39.750362
MUR 45.113755
MVR 15.443685
MWK 1734.618377
MXN 20.257845
MYR 4.491124
MZN 63.826849
NAD 19.587586
NGN 1567.650666
NIO 36.818546
NOK 10.773255
NPR 138.090559
NZD 1.772013
OMR 0.384994
PAB 1
PEN 3.732833
PGK 4.11582
PHP 57.4449
PKR 280.705549
PLN 3.91493
PYG 8031.181409
QAR 3.639755
RON 4.561789
RSD 107.396151
RUB 85.927049
RWF 1431.730066
SAR 3.750062
SBD 8.499783
SCR 14.629369
SDG 600.191587
SEK 9.978325
SGD 1.35292
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.759855
SLL 20969.501083
SOS 570.90547
SRD 36.632038
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.749759
SYP 13001.930666
SZL 19.587586
THB 34.845792
TJS 10.854032
TMT 3.498058
TND 3.082425
TOP 2.419631
TRY 37.955445
TTD 6.785107
TWD 32.995898
TZS 2677.115189
UAH 41.258897
UGX 3693.252171
UYU 42.883827
UZS 12961.218474
VES 73.249923
VND 26000.470433
VUV 126.014532
WST 2.882742
XAF 601.217951
XAG 0.032244
XAU 0.000324
XCD 2.706527
XDR 0.749568
XOF 601.217951
XPF 109.373611
YER 245.724557
ZAR 19.300303
ZMK 9001.202819
ZMW 28.042303
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    -7.7300

    60.27

    -12.83%

  • RYCEF

    0.8200

    9.2

    +8.91%

  • BCC

    8.5100

    98.44

    +8.64%

  • CMSC

    0.3900

    22.6

    +1.73%

  • SCS

    0.8700

    10.61

    +8.2%

  • RIO

    3.2900

    55.61

    +5.92%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    34.48

    +1.02%

  • BTI

    0.6600

    40.21

    +1.64%

  • NGG

    2.4700

    65.21

    +3.79%

  • RELX

    3.2300

    48.54

    +6.65%

  • VOD

    0.3900

    8.58

    +4.55%

  • JRI

    0.5200

    11.99

    +4.34%

  • AZN

    1.8600

    66.76

    +2.79%

  • CMSD

    0.3700

    22.75

    +1.63%

  • BCE

    0.1300

    21

    +0.62%

  • BP

    1.7900

    27.9

    +6.42%

'Living in a dark era': one year since Myanmar's coup
'Living in a dark era': one year since Myanmar's coup

'Living in a dark era': one year since Myanmar's coup

Hours before Myanmar's new parliament was due to convene last February, troops rounded up lawmakers in dawn raids, ending a brief democratic interlude and setting the stage for months of bloodshed.

Text size:

A year later the country's latest junta is struggling to contain the backlash unleashed by its power grab, with daily clashes and swathes of the country outside of its control.

Almost 1,500 civilians have been killed and over 11,000 arrested in its ongoing crackdown, according to a local monitor, with rights groups accusing junta troops of torture and extrajudicial killings.

But for a pro-democracy movement angered by the military's power-grab, ending its decades-long entanglement in Myanmar politics once and for all is the only option.

That means, analysts say, there is no end in sight to the crisis that has devastated the economy, emptied schools and hospitals across the country and sent thousands fleeing to neighbouring Thailand and India.

"We are still living in a dark era," said Htoo Aung -- using a pseudonym for fear of reprisal -- at a market in commercial hub Yangon.

"We have to think how we can struggle on through our daily lives under this military dictatorship rather than about our goals, our dreams in the future."

In Yangon and other cities, the junta is projecting a return to normality as traffic jams return and shopping malls slowly fill up again.

But, days before the February 1 anniversary, it is taking no chances.

Authorities recently announced that those honking car horns or banging pots and pans -- popular protests in cities following the coup -- could be charged with treason or under an anti-terror law.

But daily clashes between the dozens of "people's defence forces" (PDFs) that have sprung up across the country to fight back against the putsch show no sign of abating.

The ex-protesters and villagers that fill their ranks have dealt some painful blows to junta troops with guerilla ambushes and mine attacks, even as they struggle to secure heavy weapons.

A shadow group of lawmakers claims almost 3,000 junta troops died in fighting with PDFs between June and November -- the junta says 168 soldiers and police were killed between February and late October.

- Air strikes -

The year of conflict has taken a toll on the military, which is facing morale and recruitment problems, said International Crisis Group's Myanmar senior advisor Richard Horsey.

"But these challenges are very unlikely to force the military to capitulate or lose its grip on state power," Horsey said.

Junta troops were blamed for a Christmas Eve massacre that left the charred remains of more than 30 people on a highway in the east of the country, including two staff members of the Save the Children charity.

Earlier in January it ordered air and artillery strikes on a state capital in the east to prevent anti-coup fights from seizing ground in the town.

Myanmar's myriad ethnic armed groups have largely held back from throwing their lot in with the democracy movement thanks to a longstanding mistrust of the majority Bamar elite -- epitomised by Aung San Suu Kyi and her ousted National League for Democracy.

It is a trust deficit that a shadow "National Unity Government" dominated by lawmakers from her party, and which has widespread support, is trying to overcome.

Suu Kyi's closed-door trial in the military-built capital continues, and in the coming months she will likely be sentenced on a clutch of corruption charges -- each of which carries a maximum 15-year jail term.

- 'Knockout blow' -

With the generals shielded at the United Nations by China and Russia -- and the crisis jostling for attention with wars in Ethiopia, Yemen and Ukraine -- many in Myanmar have given up on help arriving from the international community.

The military is killing protesters almost daily "without the world noticing," said Htoo Aung.

The generals have promised a return to multiparty democracy and fresh elections by 2023.

But "it is impossible to see how they could do so given their tenuous control of much of the country," said the Crisis Group's Horsey.

It seems "very unlikely that either side will be able to deliver a knockout blow", he said.

"The stage is set for months, possibly years of violent confrontation."

G.Dominguez--TFWP