Shops and factories closed after the call for a general strike in Myanmar

Today, its security forces attempted with real bullets again Minanmar disperse protesters against the coup, killing two protesters, while banks, shops and factories remain closed following a call by unions to intensify the strike to put pressure on the junta.

Civil servants, farmers and private sector employees participated on the side of young people and activists at rallies across the country, as broadcast by AMPE.

In Mitkina (central Myanmar), multiple gunshots were heard and blood-stained protesters were transported by others away from the fire zone, according to images shared on social media.

“Two men were killed” while many are injured, including a woman who has been seriously injured, according to a rescuer.

An eyewitness told the German Agency that three people were seriously injured. Photos on social media depict the lifeless body of a victim. The mobilization continues.

Nine of the largest unions addressed call for a “complete and prolonged cessation of the economy” from today. “It’s time to act.”

Allowing economic activity to continue will only help the army that “suppresses the energy of the Burmese people,” they wrote in a joint statement. Weaving mills, a sector that flourished before the coup. February 1, malls, banks and post offices remain closed.

For its part, the junta has warned civil servants that those who do not return to work today will be fired.

The calls for strike, which were formulated from the first hours after the coup, already have a serious impact in many areas, with banks unable to operate, closed hospitals and empty ministerial offices.

More than 50 protesters have been killed since the coup began, the UN said last week. The state media deny any involvement of police and army in civilian deaths. TheBut widely publicized images show security forces firing live ammunition at rallies and transporting the bodies of protesters.

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