Dozens Wounded in Mayanmar Coppermine Protest

Secu­ri­ty forces used water can­nons, tear gas and smoke bombs to clear pro­test­ers from a cop­per mine in north­west­ern Myan­mar, wound­ing vil­lagers and Bud­dhist monks in the biggest use of force against demon­stra­tors since the reformist gov­ern­ment of Pres­i­dent Thein Sein took office last year.

Secu­ri­ty forces used water can­nons, tear gas and smoke bombs to clear pro­test­ers from a cop­per mine in north­west­ern Myan­mar, wound­ing vil­lagers and Bud­dhist monks in the biggest use of force against demon­stra­tors since the reformist gov­ern­ment of Pres­i­dent Thein Sein took office last year.

Monks and oth­er pro­test­ers had seri­ous burns after the crack­down at the Let­padaung mine near the town of Mony­wa. Pro­test­ers who oppose the mine’s impact on vil­lagers and the envi­ron­ment had occu­pied the area for 11 days.

The police action risks becom­ing a pub­lic rela­tions and polit­i­cal fias­co for Thein Sein’s gov­ern­ment, which has been tout­ing its tran­si­tion to democ­ra­cy after almost five decades of repres­sive mil­i­tary rule.

Pho­tos of the wound­ed monks showed they had sus­tained seri­ous burns on parts of their bod­ies. It was unclear what sort of weapon caused them, or whether the burns were caused by their shel­ters catch­ing fire from what­ev­er devices police used.