Golden Rock pagoda to shut down from Saturday

Smaller number of visitors will still be allowed at Golden Rock but shuttle bus trips to the mountaintop pagoda will be slashed

Published on Mar 19, 2020
(Photo : U Tun Myint)
(Photo : U Tun Myint)

Kyaiktiyo Pagoda in Mon state will be shut down on Saturday in a bid to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus, the pagoda board of trustees has told Myanmar Now.

The four-hour trekking route up to the famous mountaintop pagoda, better known as Golden Rock, will remain open but shuttle busses will be stopped.

A cable car that serves part of the route up the mountain will also be closed, officials said.

Local business owners have asked for bus owners to be allowed to run 20 trips per day, down from around 200.

The closure means cancelling a seven-month festival held at the site that was due to end in May.

 

 

Kyaw Win Hlaing, head of the board, said they received an order from the Mon state government late afternoon Wednesday to stop the festival, which has been running since last October.

The festival is the longest in Myanmar, running from the Burmese lunar months of Thadingyut to Kason, with tens of thousands of pilgrims from across the country visiting and the number peaking during dry season.

 

 

Dozens of foreigners, mostly Thai, visit the pagoda each day.

The order did not specify how long the pagoda must close for, but it will reopen once it is safe to do so, Kyaw Win Hlaing said.

The festival gets busiest at weekends, with up to 9,500 visitors using the shuttle buses that run from the base of the hill to the pagoda, according to the bus line’s chief, Myo Myint.

The Mon state parliament on March 16 sent a notice letter to the state government asking it to ban upcoming pagoda festivals in the state.

It comes after the union government banned pagoda festivals and closed cinemas until the end of April. The Thingyan festival, due to take place from April 13-17, was also cancelled.

Several companies, NGOs and international organisations such as the World Bank have told their staff to work from home and not to use public transportation starting this week.

Foreign embassies in Myanmar are also withdrawing their staff and dependents. The UK and Germany are advising their nationals to leave the country if they can, warning Myanmar’s inadequate medical facilities could be overwhelmed.

Sandar Nyan is Reporter with Myanmar Now

Junta authorities have attributed multiple detainees’ deaths to Covid-19, a designation that loved ones say is a final attempt to cover up the abuse they endured in military custody

Published on Jul 15, 2021
A makeshift memorial created by residents of Kalay on June 27 for Salai Van Tha Cung, who died in military custody after being arrested on June 26. The junta blamed his death on Covid-19. (Supplied)

Protesters Soe San and Zaw Lin were not home when some 30 junta troops raided their homes in Te Su village, in Mandalay Region’s Wundwin Township, at midnight on June 28. 

Unable to locate the men, the soldiers initially arrested Zaw Lin’s wife, then released her. 

Maintaining their innocence and fearing the further terrorisation of their families, Soe San and Zaw Lin went to the hospital in the Wundwin Township village of Pindale the following afternoon to meet with the regime authorities stationed there. 

“They didn’t do anything wrong, so they decided to meet with them to clear the air so that they would leave their families alone,” a local man from Te Su who was familiar with the arrest told Myanmar Now on the condition of anonymity. 

After spending less than one day in the junta’s custody, 44-year-old Soe San, who was also the chair of the National League for Democracy party's office in Te Su, was declared dead. 

“I think they went too far with the interrogation and killed him,” another resident of Te Su village said.

Strangely, the local said, Soe San’s body was presented to his family sealed in plastic—the standard practice for a patient infected with Covid-19, but not a man who had died in police custody.

Soe San’s face was reportedly the only part of his body exposed at the funeral. 

He was one of multiple people who have died in military custody since the February 1 coup and whose bodies were later concealed from their families under the junta’s claim that they had Covid-19 and were still contagious. If they could examine the victims, family members of the deceased say they believe their bodies would exhibit clear signs of torture. 

“I think they went too far with the interrogation and killed him."

According to data released by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) on Wednesday, there have been at least 911 civilians who have died at the hands of the military council since the coup. Of these, at least 30 died in detention. 

The military council has repeatedly dismissed the AAPP’s figures as being exaggerated.  

No Covid-19 tests are known to have been carried out in the junta’s interrogation centers, which are frequently outside of prisons. Those who have been imprisoned and released since the coup have reported that Covid-19 tests were not carried out in the prisons, either. 

Interrogation at the hospital, police station

Soe San and Zaw Lin’s families were only notified that the men had been sent to Pindale police station at around midnight, after they had been interrogated at the hospital all afternoon and evening. 

Soe San was reportedly sent back to the hospital after passing out at the police station. 

The following morning, June 30, Soe San’s family was notified at 11am that he had died. 

Their attempts to claim his body were in vain, the first Te Su villager said. 

While the military council allowed them to hold a funeral for Soe San at the Wundwin cemetery on the afternoon of July 1, they forbade the family from taking photos of the body or posting about the ceremony on social media. 

“They wrapped his body in plastic with just the face exposed. They didn’t directly tell the family that he died of Covid-19, but word got out,” the villager said. 

Only 10 family members were allowed to attend the funeral, accompanied by around 30 heavily armed troops, including soldiers from the air force and military engineers.

Zaw Lin, who turned himself in along with Soe San, was released on bail on July 3. Residents of Wundwin said he was severely injured to the point that he was not able to dress himself. 

Myanmar Now tried to contact the Pindale police station for comment on the arrests, death and allegations of torture, but the calls went unanswered.

A pattern of deaths

The military’s handling of Soe San’s death was reminiscent of that of 19-year-old Mai Nuam Za Thiang, in Kalay, Sagaing Region on June 23.

She was shot by troops while riding on the back of a motorcycle and died shortly after arriving at the hospital.

“Their post-mortem report said that the girl died of excessive bleeding. However, the body was sealed and returned to us with the claim that she had Covid-19,” a family member of Mai Nuam Za Thiang told Myanmar Now in June. 

Again, citing a Covid-19 infection, the military forced her family to cremate her immediately. 

“I think they wanted to hide something, so they used that label [of Covid-19]. We could see only the report they gave us, and her face, so we were forced to accept what they said,” her relative said at the time. 

“Their post-mortem report said that the girl died of excessive bleeding. However, the body was sealed and returned to us with the claim that she had Covid-19."

Just two days later on June 26, 26-year-old farmer Salai Van Tha Cung, also known as Zaw Htet, was arrested for unknown reasons at the hostel where he was staying. He died within 24 hours in detention. 

Salai Van Tha Cung was cremated immediately, again due to the claim that he was positive for Covid-19, despite showing no symptoms of the virus before his arrest, according to a close relative. The relative added that the victim had not been involved in the anti-coup movement. 

Chin State-based media reported that on May 9, a 59-year-old farmer from Haka Township, Pu Tale Lein, was arrested by the military and died after two days in detention. Although a local church asked that his body be returned for burial, the junta authorities told them that he had already been cremated because he had been infected with Covid-19. 

One of the earliest known examples of the junta blaming Covid-19 for the death of a detainee was in the case of 26-year-old Yar Zar Aung, who was shot in a crackdown on a protest in Mandalay and then taken into military custody on February 20.

Four days later, his family was informed that he had died in detention, allegedly from Covid-19. 

Only four of his family members were allowed to attend his cremation, and from afar. 

His wife, Phyu Phyu Win, told Myanmar Now on the day of the funeral that she did not believe Yar Zar Aung’s cause of death was the coronavirus, and felt that he had died as a result of injuries inflicted by the junta. 

“We were only able to look at him from a distance, as they said he had died of Covid-19. When we attempted to take his body [from the hospital], they wouldn’t let us,” she said. “I’m upset. I’m not going to let this go.”

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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‘It’s clear why they were operating in plainclothes: they’re scared,’ a local woman says of the gunmen

Published on Jul 15, 2021
The car targeted by the gunmen is pictured being towed after the shooting and crash in Taunggyi on July 14. 

An attack on a car on Wednesday afternoon by men believed to be junta troops has left at least one dead in the Shan State capital of Taunggyi, local sources told Myanmar Now.

Four residents confirmed to Myanmar Now that plainclothes military council members opened fire on a Honda Fit driving down Yan Gyi Aung Rd in Mingalar Oo ward at around 2pm, causing it to crash.

Citing an eyewitness, a local woman said that at least one man in the car had died in the incident; other unconfirmed reports have suggested that up to three people were killed. 

The local woman said that she believed that the plainclothes shooters were junta soldiers.

“One person died. The car is in total ruins. They have got to be part of the military—how would civilians have that kind of firepower? It’s clear why they were operating in plainclothes: they’re scared,” the woman told Myanmar Now. 

Further details about the victim were still unknown at the time of reporting. 

Another woman residing in the ward said that soon after shots were fired at the car, around 10 vehicles carrying men in plainclothes showed up at a house on Yan Gyi Aung St and arrested one man. 

“The plainclothes armed forces surrounded a house near the banyan tree and took a young man from there. It was around 2:30pm,” she said. 

Local news outlets also reported that an explosion took place in front of the township electricity office in Kan Auk ward at around 4pm, and that a car was damaged and a civilian injured. 

The active anti-dictatorship protests in Taunggyi that followed the February 1 military coup were targeted in brutal crackdowns by the junta’s armed forces, causing mass public demonstrations to be replaced by smaller groups of people organising in recent months. In June, assaults on the military’s administrative mechanisms began in the city. 

The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) has reported that 911 civilians have been killed by the junta since February. The military council, which rejects the AAPP’s figures, has yet to release a detailed statement on the deaths of the civilians.

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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A gunman shot Thet Thet Cho in the head at close range at the entrance to a market 

Published on Jul 14, 2021
Thet Thet Cho’s body after the incident on the morning of July 14 (Citizen journalist)

A junta-appointed administrator was shot and killed in Mandalay on Wednesday morning, with a local guerilla group claiming responsibility for the attack. 

Thet Thet Cho, 58, was the administrator of ward 12 in Myitnge Township. She was shot at close range in the head at the entrance of Myitnge Market at around 7am.

“She only became administrator after the coup,” said a resident who lives near the market. 

“She was forced to live at the administration office because her neighborhood wouldn’t accept her.”

“She was shot today near the checkpoint at the entrance, where they check whether people are wearing masks and stuff. She died on the spot,” added the resident, who did not witness the incident. 

Video footage posted on Facebook showed a man shooting Thet Thet Cho at close range at a crowded market. Two gunshots could be heard in the video. 

A guerilla group called NGUFF – Never Give Up: Fox Force – said in an announcement that it was responsible for the killing.  

Thet Thet Cho is the second female administrator to have been assassinated since the February coup. Soe Soe Lwin, the military-assigned administrator of Kyar Kwat Thit ward in Tamwe, Yangon, was shot and killed on June 8.

Myitnge residents said Thet Thet Cho worked as a paratha vendor before she was appointed ward administrator by the military council in April.

Soldiers came to investigate after the killing, but left in the afternoon without arresting anyone, according to local residents.

Some administrators have resigned from their positions amid frequent assassinations of junta-appointed officials across the country in recent months. 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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