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At Least Eight Reported Killed in Myanmar Anti-coup Protests

At least eight people have been killed in Myanmar after security forces opened fire on some of the biggest protests against military rule in days. Three months after a coup

At least eight people have been killed in Myanmar after security forces opened fire on some of the biggest protests against military rule in days.

Three months after a coup plunged the country into political turmoil, thousands of people in towns and cities across the country joined protests calling for “the Global Myanmar Spring Revolution”. Rallies in support of the anti-coup protests also took place outside Myanmar, as Pope Francis called for peace.

“Shake the world with the voice of Myanmar people’s unity,” the organisers said in a statement.

Two people were shot and killed in Mandalay, the country’s second-biggest city, according to the Mizzima news agency.

The Irrawaddy news site earlier posted a photograph of a man it said was a security officer in plain clothes taking aim with a rifle in Mandalay.

Three people were killed in the central town of Wetlet, the Myanmar Now news agency said, and two were killed in different towns in Shan State in the northeast, two media outlets reported. One person was also killed in the northern jade-mining town of Hpakant, according to the Kachin News Group reported.

In Yangon, young people gathered on a street corner before marching swiftly down the streets in a flash mob – dispersing soon after to avoid a clash with the authorities.

“To bring down the military dictatorship is our cause!” they chanted, waving a three-finger salute in a show of resistance.

In eastern Shan state, youths carried a banner that read: “We cannot be ruled at all”.

Bomb blasts were also reported in different parts of Yangon on Sunday. Explosions have been happening with increasing frequency in the former capital and authorities have blamed them on “instigators”.

There have been no claims of responsibility for the explosions.

The military seized power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi and the ruling National League for Democracy (NLD) in a coup on February 1, triggered a civil disobedience movement of strikes and mass protests.

Long-running conflicts with ethnic armed groups in border areas in the north and east have also intensified, displacing tens of thousands of civilians, according to United Nations estimates.

The military has responded to the protests with arrests and lethal force and ignored calls from neighbouring countries and the UN to end the violence.

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