▲ A scene where the police strikes one of the paramedics with a gun butt


The courage of the citizens of Myanmar to take risks and accuse the military police of atrocities through mobile phones amid increasing bloody suppression of the Myanmar military forces is shining.



"Today is the most bleeding day since the February 1st coup," said Christine Schraner Berginer, the UN envoy to Myanmar on the 3rd. "Now, the total number of deaths has exceeded 50 since the coup."



Envoy Berginer said, "I watched very shocking videos," he said. "One of them is the military police assaulting a volunteer paramedic, and the other is that the military police dragged a demonstrator and fired a gun from a very close distance of about 1 meter. It was a shooting scene. He didn't even resist the arrest. This man died on the street."



This video is a video taken directly by netizens on social media or at the risk of being shot by the military and police.




On the 9th of last month, the scene of Mia Tuwetuwe Kain, 20, who was hit by the police's live ammunition in the head and became the first dead after the coup, was also shared with netizens' videos around the world.



In addition, countless photos and videos showing the indiscriminate and brutal violence of the military and police against protesters as well as general Myanmar protesters are posted on social media, shared by netizens, and spreading all over the world.




In particular, in the case of videos, there are not many cases where black areas appear on both sides of the screen, or columns of window frames or balconies are exposed. This is a record of the atrocities of the military and police in a situation where soldiers shoot indiscriminately. .



Currently, Myanmar's state broadcaster is concealing the military coup, and independent Internet media are struggling to convey the facts, but the organization and manpower are weak. 



(Photo = Twitter capture, Irrawaddy capture, Yonhap News)