Myanmar police fired
water cannon and tear gas at protesters against a Chinese-backed copper
mine on Thursday, the government said, injuring dozens in a crackdown
hours before Aung San Suu Kyi visited the area.
The
demonstration was the latest example of long-oppressed Myanmar citizens
testing the limits of their new freedoms after the end last year of
decades of authoritarian junta rule that saw protests routinely stamped
out.
Demonstrators, who say farmers have been evicted to
make way for the mine near the town of Monywa in northern Myanmar,
recounted being shaken from their sleep in the early hours of the
morning as police moved in to disperse them.
Several monks were arrested and around 30 others
"suffered burns to their body", a monk called Yaywata, who goes by one
name, told the news agency.
It was unclear exactly what kind of device caused the burns.
President Thein Sein's office said in a statement that
water cannon, tear gas and smoke bombs were used against the
protesters, but a spokesman denied allegations by local media that a
form of chemical weapon had been deployed.
"It's not true at all that chemical weapons were used
in the crackdown," Nyan Tun, a director of the presidential office, told
the news agency.
As criticism of the police mounted, opposition leader
Suu Kyi arrived in the area where she met officials from the Chinese
mine operator Wanbao near the scene of the crackdown and was later due
to give a speech linked to the dispute.
"She said it was necessary to find a solution to the
problem together," a Wanbao official who did not want to be named told
the news agency.
Villagers, monks and students had been warned to
vacate protest camps near the mine -a joint venture between Wanbao and
military-owned Myanmar Economic Holdings by Tuesday, but had vowed to
defy authorities.
The government is being closely watched, with
activists warning that the use of junta-style security tactics could
undermine Myanmar's reform process.
"These kind of old habit solutions should not happen,"
said Kyaw Min Yu, a member of the '88 Generation movement, born during
huge student-led demonstrations in 1988.
"The government should be more patient in this
transition period. If it (violence) is again used in the future, we
cannot continue forward."
Protesters are demanding the company stops work until it releases environmental and social impact studies.
During a September protest activists said some 8,000
acres (3,200 hectares) of land had been confiscated from local farmers
without consultation, and in some cases without compensation
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