In Myanmar, the largest protests were held after the military coup on the 6th, calling for the release of detained state counselors Aung San Suu Kyi.

People who participated in the demonstration are calling for continued protests for seven days, and the scale of the demonstration is likely to grow even as the military tightens information control.

In Yangon, Myanmar's largest city, demonstrations protesting the coup d'etat took place at least five places at about the same time on the 6th.



Participants marched, shouting "I don't need a dictator" or "Release all the detainees," in order for young people to show resistance to powerful politics at a rebel demonstration in neighboring Thailand. Some people even posed with the three fingers they used for.



The man who participated complained, "We grew up in the junta, so we don't want to go back to that era. We have to fight the dictator."



Authorities have deployed and monitored armed police forces around the demonstrators, but so far they have not shown any movement to curb the demonstrators.



On the 6th, the Ministry of Transport and Communications of Myanmar issued a notice to each telecommunications carrier to stop Internet communication until midnight on the 7th local time, and it is no longer possible to call for demonstrations using SNS.



However, participants are calling on each other to continue protesting on the spot for the same six days, and the scale of the demonstration is likely to grow even as the military tightens information control.