YANGON, Myanmar, Sept. 27, 2007

Shots Fired At Huge Myanmar Protest

Troops Appeared To Aim Above Crowd Of 70,000 Anti-Gov't Demonstrators

    • Police in Yangon, Myanmar, Sept. 27, 2007, stand guard by a barbed wire blockade erected to crack down on tens of thousands of demonstrators - led by Buddhist monks - who have protesting the nation's military government.

      Police in Yangon, Myanmar, Sept. 27, 2007, stand guard by a barbed wire blockade erected to crack down on tens of thousands of demonstrators - led by Buddhist monks - who have protesting the nation's military government.  (AP/Mandalay Gazette/HO)

    • Sydney, Australia, Sept. 27, 2007: marchers showing their solidarity with anti-government protesters in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, carried photos of Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Sui Kyi.

      Sydney, Australia, Sept. 27, 2007: marchers showing their solidarity with anti-government protesters in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, carried photos of Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Sui Kyi.  (AP)

    • The resolve of Myanmar's Buddhist monks, seen here in Yangon on Sept. 25, 2007, has alarmed the government, which has imposed curfews and closed temples where demonstrators have been gathering.

      The resolve of Myanmar's Buddhist monks, seen here in Yangon on Sept. 25, 2007, has alarmed the government, which has imposed curfews and closed temples where demonstrators have been gathering.  (AP)

    • The monks' protests against Myanmar's military government, the largest anti-government demonstrations in 19 years, are steadily attracting more and more followers and have spread beyond the capital. Above: Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon, Sept. 25, 2007.

      The monks' protests against Myanmar's military government, the largest anti-government demonstrations in 19 years, are steadily attracting more and more followers and have spread beyond the capital. Above: Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon, Sept. 25, 2007.  (AP)

    • Anti-government demonstrators in Yangon, continuing their marches in defiance of an order by the military government, have begun each day of protest with prayers at the Shwedagon Pagoda, seen here Sept. 25, 2007.

      Anti-government demonstrators in Yangon, continuing their marches in defiance of an order by the military government, have begun each day of protest with prayers at the Shwedagon Pagoda, seen here Sept. 25, 2007.  (AP/Democratic Voice of Burma)

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  • Play CBS Video Video Myanmar Violence Escalates

    Police in Myanmar's capital, Yangon, fired shots to dispel more than 300 Buddhist monks who were protesting the ruling military junta's crackdown on dissent. Barry Petersen reports.

  • Video Monk Protest Dispelled

    "CBS News RAW": Police in riot gear fired warning shots to disperse a gathering of more than 300 Buddhist monks who were protesting a ban on assembly in Yangon, Myanmar.

  • Photo Essay Myanmar Monks March

    Buddhist monks and their supporters protest against military junta.

  • Fast Facts Burma

    Learn about the people, economy and history of Burma (aka Myanmar).

(CBS/AP)  Soldiers fired warning shots above an estimated crowd of 70,000 anti-government demonstrators who gathered in Yangon Thursday in defiance of a crackdown that has sparked international concern and appeals to Myanmar's ruling junta to show restraint in its reaction to the protesters.

Witnesses said at least one man had been shot, though the weapons fire did not appear to be aimed directly at the crowd that had gathered at Sule Pagoda.

Protesters shouted at the soldiers, angry about early morning raids by security forces on Buddhist monasteries during which soldiers reportedly beat up and arrested more than 100 monks.

Earlier Thursday morning, China called on all sides in Myanmar to exercise restraint and exhorted foreign media not to worsen the situation by exaggerating events.

"China hopes all parties can exercise restraint and properly handle the situation," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at a media briefing. She said foreign reports risked "exaggerating and hyping up" the situation.

The unfolding crackdown by Myanmar's government against democracy demonstrators, many of them Buddhist monks, has put China in a difficult position.

The communist government has developed close diplomatic ties with Myanmar's government and is major trading partner and investor. But with the Beijing Olympics 11 months away, China has been fending off criticism that it shelters unpopular or abusive regimes around the world.

Wednesday, security forces in Myanmar opened fire on demonstrators, and witnesses said police beat and dragged away dozens of Buddhist monks. The government said at least one person was killed, while dissident groups and media reported up to eight dead.

The military junta's announcement on state radio and television was the first acknowledgment that force has been used to suppress the protests and its first admission that blood had been shed after a month of mostly peaceful demonstrations.

The United States and the European Union condemned the attacks and called on the military rulers to open a dialogue with pro-democracy leaders, including detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, according to a joint statement on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly.

The U.N. Security Council will hold closed consultations on Myanmar later Wednesday, said U.N. deputy spokeswoman Marie Okabe.

About 300 monks and activists were arrested on the ninth straight day of anti-government protests in Yangon, dissidents said, although that number could not be independently confirmed.

Myanmar's leaders had warned the monks to stop the protests after some 100,000 people joined marches Monday in the largest anti-government demonstrations since a 1988 pro-democracy uprising was violently suppressed in the country formerly known as Burma.

The government said security forces opened fire after the crowd of 10,000 people, including "so-called monks," failed to disperse at Yangon's Sule Pagoda. It said the police used minimum force.

The dead man, aged 30, was hit by a bullet, the announcement said. It added that the wounded, two men aged 25 and 27, and a 47-year-old woman, were also hurt when the police fired, but did not specify their injuries.

Witnesses who were known to The Associated Press said they had seen two women and one young man with gunshot wounds in the chaotic confrontations.

Khim Maung Win, deputy editor of the Democratic Voice of Burma, said eight people - five monks and three civilians - were reported killed and at least four seriously wounded.

Zin Linn, information minister for the Washington-based National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma, which is Myanmar's self-styled government-in-exile, said at least five monks were killed, while an organization of exiled political activists in Thailand, the National League for Democracy-Liberated Area said three monks had been confirmed dead, and about 17 wounded.

The reports could not be independently confirmed by the AP.

The security forces had fired warning shots and tear gas to try to disperse the crowds of demonstrators while hauling away the defiant, cinnamon-robed monks into waiting military trucks - the first mass arrests since protests in this military dictatorship erupted Aug. 19. The monks are highly revered in Myanmar.

In its joint statement condemning the attack on protesters, the United States and the EU urged the Security Council to "discuss this situation urgently and consider further steps including sanctions."

It also urged China, India and Southeast Asian nations to use their influence to end the crackdown.

"The European Union and the United States express their solidarity with the people of Burma/Myanmar. We are deeply troubled by reports that security forces have fired on and attacked peaceful demonstrators and arrested many Buddhist monks and others," the joint statement said.

"We call on the authorities to stop the violence and to open a process of dialogue with pro-democracy leaders including Aung San Suu Kyi and representatives of the ethnic minorities," the document said.

Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried said after the meeting at the EU mission in New York that the diplomats agreed the "text had to be very strong."

On Tuesday, President Bush announced new U.S. sanctions against Myanmar, accusing the military dictatorship of imposing "a 19-year reign of fear" that denies basic freedoms of speech, assembly and worship. (Video)

David Miliband, the U.K. Foreign Secretary, said Wednesday morning after a conversation with the British Ambassador to Myanmar that the "situation remains very tense."

"It's important that they (junta) continue to understand that restraint must remain the order of the day," Miliband told reporters, adding that the military regime seemed at least cognizant of the fact that the world was watching very carefully.

Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, who was appointed as the U.N's independent expert on human rights in Myanmar seven years ago, told the AP the confrontation between the monks and the security forces will end in "a disaster" unless the international community makes a concerted effort to stop further escalation.

"You will have a real threat to security in the area because you will have a regime that is politically unstable for many years to come," Pinheiro said in Geneva.

The use of force will almost certainly put pressure on Myanmar's top economic and diplomatic supporter, China, which is eager to burnish its international image before next year's Olympics in Beijing.

When faced with a similar crisis in 1988, Myanmar brutally suppressed a student-led democracy uprising. Soldiers shot into crowds of peaceful demonstrators, killing thousands.

The junta had banned all public gatherings of more than five people and imposed a nighttime curfew following eight days of anti-government marches led by monks across the country in the largest protests in nearly 20 years.

As the ninth day of unrest began Wednesday, the crowd of monks and students - along with members of Suu Kyi's pro-democracy party - set off from the famed Shwedagon Pagoda to the Sule Pagoda in the heart of the city, but were blocked by military trucks along the route.

Other blocs of marchers fanned out into downtown streets with armed security forces trying to disperse them. There were reports of destruction of property but it was unclear whether this was carried out by the demonstrators or pro-junta thugs, who were seen among the troops and police. Witnesses said an angry mob at the pagoda burned two police motorcycles.

"They will kill us, monks and nuns. Maybe we should go back to normal life as before," said a young nun, her back pressed against the back of a building near the scenes of chaos.

But a student at a roadside watching the arrival of the demonstrators said, "If they are brave, we must be brave. They risk their lives for us."

The two asked that their names not be used for fear of reprisals.

Other protesters carried flags emblazoned with the fighting peacock, a key symbol of the democracy movement in Myanmar.

Soldiers with assault rifles had earlier blocked all four major entrances to the soaring pagoda, one of the most sacred in Myanmar, and sealed other flash points of anti-government protests.

A comedian famed for his anti-government gibes became the first well-known activist rounded up following the protests. Zarganar, who uses only one name, was taken from his home overnight by authorities.

The junta imposed the 9 p.m.-to-5 a.m. curfew and ban on public assembly after 35,000 people monks and their supporters defied the warnings Tuesday.

The demonstrations began after the government raised fuel prices in one of Asia's poorest countries. But they are based in deep-rooted dissatisfaction with the repressive military rule that has gripped the country since 1962.

In Mandalay, Myanmar's second-largest city, more than 800 monks, nuns and laymen played a cat-and-mouse game with some 100 soldiers who tried to stop them marching from the Mahamuni Paya Pagoda, which they had tried to enter earlier.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 99 Comments
by aldee41 September 27, 2007 12:01 AM EDT
The dead are Buddhists. The country has no oil reserves. King George the Worst will pass.
The next President will be a Democrat.
Chose wisely. Chose Richardson.
Reply to this comment
by reporter14 September 26, 2007 9:25 PM EDT
A Picture is worth a thousand Words

www.poconocommunitynews.com
Reply to this comment
by coffee_guy1 September 26, 2007 9:05 PM EDT
''course there''s always apple sauce.
Reply to this comment
by coffee_guy1 September 26, 2007 9:01 PM EDT
"get a room you two."

I wouldn''t know what to do.
Reply to this comment
by lorinkundert September 26, 2007 8:19 PM EDT
We are always quick to condemn these acts by other governments, but I wonder what this Government (US) will do when the people wake up and demand that it either comply with the Constitution or face dissolution.
Reply to this comment
by mitch0927 September 26, 2007 7:05 PM EDT
I of course am guilty of that, and it won''t happen again from me.
Reply to this comment
by mitch0927 September 26, 2007 7:03 PM EDT
Something I am not keen in seeing is foul language on here. It isn''t necessary and shows a lack of respect for others and to be honest, it shows a lack of maturity.
Reply to this comment
by aaabee-2009 September 26, 2007 6:59 PM EDT
I did take it wrong. One is reluctant to bring down full body shields after a stimulating debate with Mudrose. :) Bless his/her heart.
Reply to this comment
by mitch0927 September 26, 2007 6:48 PM EDT
You took it the wrong way.....it was a joke. I''m sure you''ve heard the "get a room" before.
Reply to this comment
by aaabee-2009 September 26, 2007 6:29 PM EDT
get a room you two. Posted by mitch0927 at 03:08 PM : Sep 26, 2007

Do you have a problem with being nice to people? Or are you and Mudrose the only two allowed to exchange verbal love?
Reply to this comment
by l8c6 September 26, 2007 6:26 PM EDT
Posted by l8c6

Yawn....zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
zzzzzz!

Posted by mudrose

what a juvenile does when having lost a debate
Reply to this comment
by l8c6 September 26, 2007 6:22 PM EDT
correction, the rich, the wealthy, the powerful do need they masses...
Reply to this comment
by l8c6 September 26, 2007 6:20 PM EDT
18c6 is right. the rich are always with us.
hoarding, gloating, mocking the have nots. wanting
more, and more, and more and more by hook or crook.
soon the rich will not need us, even as consumers
of the cars they sell us so we can get to work.
most people spend their whole paychecks from
working to get to work. might as well just
sleep in a cot at your work station. but soon
androids will do that, and the rich can dispense
with the ''''bothersome'''' peasantry once and for all.

Posted by snidegrass

Actually they do the masses, a large middle class with opportunity. This has been lost on many today however. The current form of sociopathology has done its self in repeatedly throughout history. It''s the masses who suffer first though. What has propped up the wealthy of the corrupted latin american countries has been the presence of a productive western world comprised of the greatest common good, a large middle class with opportunity from which the wealthy of these third world countries (middle east included) have nursed from. If the middle class is obliterated the rich will stagnate and inbreed as they have in history.
Reply to this comment
by reporter14 September 26, 2007 6:20 PM EDT
A picture is worth a thousand Words,
www.poconocommunitynews.com
Reply to this comment
by mitch0927 September 26, 2007 6:08 PM EDT
get a room you two.
Reply to this comment
by aaabee-2009 September 26, 2007 5:55 PM EDT
Does matter. You matter.
Reply to this comment
by coffee_guy1 September 26, 2007 5:42 PM EDT
Doesn''t matter.
Reply to this comment
by aaabee-2009 September 26, 2007 5:37 PM EDT
donnie, I know it''s you. No one else can lean on the K key the way you can.

You doing okay, buddy?
Reply to this comment
by coffee_guy1 September 26, 2007 5:32 PM EDT
liberal media..
Reply to this comment
by coffee_guy1 September 26, 2007 5:30 PM EDT
What de ***** am I do''in here..
Reply to this comment
See all 99 Comments

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