Protesters on Sunday have been marching around the Yangon University area, changing directions to avoid roadblocks and any clashes with police. A witness has seen several police trucks in the area.
Initially few people resisted the cup, partly because of widespread communication difficulties, as well as fears of further breakdowns.
NetBlocks’ internet surveillance service said Saturday that the country was in the midst of a second “blackout” of internet blackouts as the military sought to seize power.
According to NetBlocks, real-time network data showed that connections had dropped to 16% of normal levels and users had reported difficulty getting online.
Myanmar’s Ministry of Transport and Communications (MoTC) ordered the data network to be shut down on Saturday, according to Norwegian telecommunications company Telenor Group, which runs Myanmar’s Telenor.
The group said, writing on Twitter, that the ministry cited “Myanmar telecommunications law, and cited the circulation of false news, the stability of the country and public interest as the basis for the order.”
Communication between protesters Sunday was largely via SMS texts, phone calls, and verbal reporting, according to a witness in Yangon. On Saturday, a large crowd announced where they would meet on Sunday, resulting in better organization, the witness said.
Members of the Students’ Union, Labor Union, and Suu Kyi National Democracy League Party (NLD) were expected to join the protest on Sunday.
A couple raise objections
For more than 50 years, Myanmar – also known as Burma – was run by successive lone military governments that impoverished the country and prevented any dissent. Thousands of critics, activists, journalists, academics and artists were constantly imprisoned and tortured during that time.
It was widely reported that the NLD won another decisive victory in a general election in November 2020, giving another five years in power and a hopeful prospect for some militant figures that an opposition party could send. support for democratic empowerment.
The power came suddenly when the new parliament was to be open and after months of escalation between the civilian government and the powerful army, known as the Tatmadaw, over electoral irregularities that are accused. The country’s Electoral Commission has once again denied that mass fraud took place.
Hundreds of NLD lawyers were detained in the capital Naypyitaw on Monday, where they had arrived to take their seats. Since then the junta has removed 24 ministers and a messenger from the government and named 11 of his own allies as deputies to take up positions in a new administration.
Helen Regan of CNN and James Griffiths contributed to this report.