Banner Top
Sunday, April 28, 2024

Two years after Myanmar’s military coup, a young factory worker turned resistance fighter mourns the loss of his leg in battle. A former diplomat has not seen his family in four years. A beauty queen adjusts to a new life in wintry Canada. And an exiled teacher dreams of returning to school.

The Feb 1, 2021 coup, which unseated Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government, has left a trail of upended lives in its wake.

US-based conflict monitoring group Acled says about 19,000 people died last year as a crackdown on protests led many to take up arms against the military.

Some 1.2 million people have been displaced and over 70,000 have left the country, according to the United Nations, which has accused the military of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Myanmar’s military says it is carrying out a legitimate campaign against “terrorists”. It did not respond to requests for comment by Reuters.

The stories of four people reflect a crisis the UN special envoy last week warned was taking a “catastrophic toll” on the population.

Aye Chan heard the rat-tat-tat of gunfire followed by an explosion.

“I didn’t know if I had been hit or not,” the 21-year-old told Reuters, recalling the military attack last year that cost him his leg.

When he tried to stand, his legs didn’t work. A comrade carried him to a hospital where he awoke to find one had been amputated from the knee down.

A factory worker making instant noodles before the coup, he had been part of the massive crowds which took to the streets to demand democracy be restored after the coup.

When protest groups began taking up arms, he joined them.

The first time on the frontlines, his heart was pounding.

“Then I looked around at my comrades and they were smiling and laughing. I was not afraid.”

While morale among the resistance troops is high, he said, they are outmatched by a well-equipped army.

“When they shoot, they shoot continuously, we can’t even raise our head,” he said. “We need to save bullets as well.”

Now, he spends most days sleeping, cooking and sharing food with friends. “I try to live my life as happily as I can,” he said. “I can’t do the things I did before.”

Reuters is not disclosing his whereabouts for security reasons.

He has no regrets about joining the resistance.

“If I recover enough, I will go back to war. This is until the end.”

THE DIPLOMAT

Aung Soe Moe, 52, was the first secretary in Myanmar’s embassy in Japan when the coup happened.

A month later, he joined hundreds of thousands of government workers who quit to join the civil disobedience movement, which aimed to cripple the military’s ability to govern.

His wife, stuck in Myanmar with his daughter after the COVID-19 pandemic, encouraged him to speak out. They later fled across the border to Thailand, where many from Myanmar have sought refuge but have been trapped without documents. He has not seen them since 2019.

Alone in Tokyo, he had to move out of his plush three-bed apartment in the embassy grounds. With his source of income gone, other Myanmar residents in Japan offered money to cover his basics and rent for a cramped studio flat.

Japan’s government extended Aung Soe Moe’s diplomatic visa so he could remain in Tokyo, but he can’t work and that visa expires in July. Japan’s foreign ministry declined to comment on his future status.

“I suffered a lot but there is nothing worse than losing the future of the people in Myanmar,” he told Reuters.

He volunteers a few days a week doing administrative tasks such as writing social media posts for Myanmar’s National Unity Government – a parallel civilian government set up after the coup.

He is worried the world will forget about Myanmar, especially since the war in Ukraine.

“But the Myanmar people have not given up on the truth,” he said. “We will never give up!”

Myanmar’s beauty queen Han Lay, who had been exiled after speaking out against military rule in her country, uses her phone while working at her house in London, in Ontario, Canada Jan 28, 2023.
Myanmar’s beauty queen Han Lay, who had been exiled after speaking out against military rule in her country, uses her phone while working at her house in London, in Ontario, Cana

Banner Content

Message from the CEO

On Internatonal Women’s Day

The mankind will not exist if there is no woman on this planet .Nature gave this power to woman to carry the source of existence.In today’s world even there are lots of awareness and activities to protect the rights of women there are still many evidence of discrimination and abuse for women . Women are still facing difficulties to live a decent and happy life . The physical or gender differences should not matter , what is most important is that we are all human being and Humanity is above all .

LATEST POSTS

Agora, Bengal Meat fined
valentine day 2018

valentine day 2018

July 21, 2018
Forever you are mine

Forever you are mine

August 7, 2022
Beautiful Bangladesh

TV Channel

img advertisement

FOLLOW US

YOUTUBE

Advertisement

img advertisement

Social

Advertisement

img advertisement