A committee representing Myanmar’s elected lawmakers has applauded efforts to defy the regime’s takeover of power
A group of elected parliamentarians deposed by the coup that transferred power to the military on February 1 has called on the public to keep up its resistance to the newly installed junta.
In a statement released on Saturday, the Committee Representing the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH) said it was necessary to continue the fight to protect civil rights.

Urging resistance to the regime’s amendments to the Personal Freedom and Personal Security Law and the Village Tract Administration Law, it said that the regime’s efforts to restrict civil rights would “destroy the democratic transition.”
Provisions in the Village Tract Administration Law requiring household inspections and the registration of guests were scrapped by the National League for Democracy (NLD) government soon after it assumed power five years ago.
The CRPH was formed on February 5 by 15 elected MPs from the NLD in response to a coup carried out just hours before the lower house of parliament was set to convene for the first time since last year’s election.
Five days after it was formed, the committee was joined by Robert Nyay Reh of the Kayah State Democratic Party and Lamin Tun of the Ta’ang (Palaung) National Party.
In an earlier statement marking National Day (February 12), the committee said it applauded the nationwide civil disobedience movement launched by public servants opposed to the military coup.
In a statement issued on February 11, the CRPH said it would enact a law to fully guarantee that government employees would not lose their jobs for staging walkouts aimed at restoring civilian rule.
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