Thursday, August 30, 2007

Burmese hotels asked to help in search for activists

Burma’s military government has ordered local officials and hotels to be on the look-out for key pro-democracy activists as it tries to squash unusually persistent protests sparked by fuel price hikes, an official said on Thursday.

Demonstrations triggered by soaring prices began on August 19 and have continued almost daily—although they have dwindled from a few hundred people to a few dozen—as the junta employed menacing gangs of civilians to rough up protesters.

Dozens of people have been detained, including several prominent pro-democracy activists many of whom are party colleagues of detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. However, several key protest leaders remain at large.

Authorities have sent out their names, photos and biographical information to local officials and hotel operators across Burma’s biggest city of Rangoon in the hope of rounding up the remaining protest leaders, said a local official who asked not to be named for fear of retaliation.

“We have been instructed to inform higher authorities immediately if we sight any of these people in our area,” he said, adding that hotels, motels and guesthouses have been given the same information and instructed to inform authorities of any suspicious activities.

He said the list of dissidents includes Mi Mi, a member of the 88 Generation group, the former students at the forefront of a 1988 democracy uprising who were subjected to lengthy prison terms and torture after the rebellion was brutally suppressed by the military.

No demonstrations were known to have taken place on Wednesday in Rangoon, although there were reports of protests in two or three other towns. Information about them could not be independently confirmed.

Tension was especially high at Rangoon’s Hledan Junction, where security officials and their civilian auxiliaries clamped down on Tuesday on a protest within minutes of its start.

They pushed through crowds of onlookers to rough up about 15 demonstrators before tossing them into waiting trucks to take them away for detention, witnesses said.

On Wednesday, three trucks, each carrying about 20 tough-looking young men, were parked on either side of the road, watching for any protesters. About 20 plainclothes security officials roamed nearby sidewalks at the intersection, a traditional site for protests.

The EU on Tuesday said it was concerned about recent arrests of leading activists and the “decision to detain individuals who were exercising their right to peaceful demonstration.”

While the protesters have shown no sign of giving up, analysts said they didn’t expect the momentum to last because the general public remained afraid to join in.

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