Myanmar crowds taunt troops
By Aung Hla Tun
YANGON (Reuters) - Crowds taunted and cursed security forces that barricaded central Yangon on Friday to try to prevent more mass protests against Myanmar's 45 years of military rule and deepening economic hardship.
Potentially deadly games of cat and mouse went on for hours around the barbed-wire barriers in a city terrified of a repeat of 1988, when the army killed an estimated 3,000 people in crushing an uprising in the former Burma.
The junta faced a torrent of international condemnation but usually ignores outside pressure and appeared to have cut off access to the Internet, through which much of the news about their crackdown reached the rest of the world.
In one small concession, it agreed to admit U.N. special envoy Ibrahim Gambari, of Nigeria, who was expected to arrive on Saturday. Singaporean Foreign Minister George Yong-Boon Yeo said he believed Myanmar's government would "be restrained in what it does" during Gambari's visit.
"If he fails, then the situation can become quite dreadful," Yeo said. "He's the best hope we have. He is trusted on both sides."
Few Buddhist monks were among the crowds on Friday, unlike in previous days, after soldiers ransacked 10 monasteries on Thursday and carted off hundreds inside.
When the troops charged, the protesters vanished into narrow side streets, only to emerge elsewhere to renew their abuse until an overnight curfew took effect.
"F--- you, army. We only want democracy," some yelled in English. "May the people who beat monks be struck down by lightning," others chanted in Burmese. Continued...







