A woman who was severely injured while protesting against Myanmar’s military coup is in critical condition.
She was hurt at a protest on Tuesday in the capital city of Nay Pyi Taw, which saw police trying to disperse protesters using water cannon, rubber bullets and live rounds.
Rights groups and news outlets say the woman was shot in the head.
There have been reports of serious injuries as police have increased their use of force, but no casualties so far.
Tens of thousands have turned out in street protests against the coup, which overthrew Aung San Suu Kyi’s democratically-elected government last week, despite a recent ban on large gatherings and a night curfew.
Demonstrations re-started on Wednesday morning, for a fifth consecutive day, with a large group of civil servants gathering in Nay Pyi Taw to protest.
How did she get injured?
Police had used water cannon against protesters in Nay Pyi Taw, who refused to retreat.
Warning shots were reportedly fired into the air before rubber bullets were fired at the crowd – but doctors later said it appeared live ammunition had hit protesters.
According to BBC Burmese, who spoke to an unnamed medical officer from a Nay Pyi Taw hospital, one woman suffered a serious head injury and another demonstrator had chest injuries. The woman is now in intensive care.
Rights groups and local news outlets say the woman was shot in the head while protesting.
According to a report by Human Rights Watch, a doctor from the hospital said the woman had a “projectile lodged in her head and had lost significant brain function”.
The unidentified doctor said the woman’s wound was consistent with that of live ammunition, and that a metal bullet had penetrated the back of her right ear. A man wounded at the same protest also appeared to have similar injuries.
A separate report by Fortify Rights quoted a doctor who said the woman was brain dead from an “imminently fatal gunshot wound to the head”.
Source: BBC News