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Myanmar coup: six months of turmoil Yangon, Aug 1 (AFP) Aug 01, 2021 Myanmar's military seized power on February 1, ousting the civilian government and arresting its leader, Aung San Suu Kyi. More than 900 people have since been killed and thousands of others arrested after the violent suppression of mass protests against junta rule. Here is a look back at the six months since the military brought Myanmar's nascent democracy to a sudden end:
The generals claim fraud in the previous November's elections, which Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party won by a landslide. But their actions spark global condemnation, from Pope Francis to US President Joe Biden.
The junta tries to block social media platforms including Facebook, which is hugely popular in Myanmar. Nightly internet blackouts are later imposed.
In the following weeks these protests swell to hundreds of thousands of people in cities and villages around the country. Workers begin a nationwide strike on February 8. A 19-year-old woman is shot in the head after police fire on crowds in the capital Naypyidaw the next day.
More sanctions follow from Britain and the European Union.
Violent crackdowns on street protests escalate and by March 11, Amnesty International says it has documented atrocities by the junta including the use of battlefield weapons on unarmed protesters. A day later a UN rights expert on Myanmar accuses the military of crimes against humanity.
The next month, ousted civilian lawmakers forced into hiding announce the formation of a shadow "National Unity Government".
She faces an eclectic mix of charges, including illegally importing walkie talkies and flouting coronavirus restrictions during elections in 2020.
He appears in court on June 17 and is charged under a law that criminalises dissent against the military. Fellow US citizen and journalist Nathan Maung is released by the junta after months in detention, later telling AFP that he was beaten and denied food and water during interrogation.
People defy military curfews to queue for oxygen cylinders for their loved ones and volunteers take up the grim task of bringing out the dead for cremation.
It makes no mention of holding a fresh vote. burs-rma/gle
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