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Myanmar monks march for 4th day of protest

Monks took to the streets in Myanmar's largest city for a fourth straight day Friday, while the military junta insisted it has no plans to call a state of emergency to quell protests that have posed the greatest threat to the regime in a decade.
Buddhist monks gather in front of the city hall in Myanmar's largest city Yangon on Friday after marching from the famous Swedagon Pagoda. About 3,000 people including 1,500 Buddhist monks marched through the flooded streets.
Buddhist monks gather in front of the city hall in Myanmar's largest city Yangon on Friday after marching from the famous Swedagon Pagoda. About 3,000 people including 1,500 Buddhist monks marched through the flooded streets.AFP - Getty Images
/ Source: The Associated Press

Monks took to the streets in Myanmar's largest city for a fourth straight day Friday, while the military junta insisted it has no plans to call a state of emergency to quell protests that have posed the greatest threat to the regime in a decade.

Braving intense rain, about 200 monks converged on Mei Lamu pagoda on the outskirts of Yangon. After chanting sermons and praying for 15 minutes, the monks dispersed, witnesses said.

The monks' activities have given new life to a protest movement that began a month ago after the government raised fuel prices, sparking demonstrations against policies that are causing economic hardship.

Meanwhile, the U.N. Special Envoy to Myanmar Ibrahim Gambari told the Security Council Thursday in New York that recent protests and the military regime's subsequent crackdowns raised "serious concerns" and underlined the urgency of resolving the political turmoil in Myanmar.

Gambari told the council in a closed door session he plans to visit Myanmar, also known as Burma, but has set no date.

'Serious concerns'
"Undoubtedly, the developments over the last few weeks in Myanmar have raised serious concerns in the international community and once again underscore the urgency to step up our efforts to find solutions to the challenges facing the country," Gambari told the council, according to a U.N. account of the closed session.

On Thursday, almost 1,000 monks _ joined by thousands of their countrymen _ marched through Yangon and staged a demonstration at the Shwedagon Pagoda, the country's holiest shrine, which has served as gathering place for anti-government demonstrations for decades, including a failed 1988 democratic uprising.

Authorities, normally quick to crack down hard on dissent, left the marchers unmolested, apparently wary of sparking further problems. Bystanders linked arms to form a human chain to prevent a possible disruption.

Rumors were rife that the anti-government protests would spark a government crackdown, a charge denied by a government spokesman.

"The Myanmar government will not declare a state of emergency. You can see the government handles the situation peacefully," the Information Ministry's Ye Htut said, in an e-mail response to a query sent Thursday.

Roughing up monks
Monks launched the latest series of protests Tuesday, after the junta failed to apologize by a Monday deadline for allegedly roughing up monks during a protest in the northern Myanmar town of Pakokku on Sept. 5.

The government, meanwhile, has tried to distance itself from events in Pakokku and accused pro-democracy activists of trying to use the protests to provoke monks, students and others into launching an uprising similar to the one in 1988.

"The international community should see their hidden agenda and stop hailing them as a democracy activists," Ye Htut said.

The protests also reflect long pent-up opposition to the repressive military regime, and have become the most sustained challenge to the junta since a wave of student demonstrations that were forcibly suppressed in December 1996.

Authorities have so far detained dozens of activists. Local journalists covering the protests have also been harassed and had their equipment stolen, which the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders on Friday called a strategy aimed at preventing them from doing their jobs.

The press freedom group also said the protests have been accompanied by an increase in censorship and propaganda in the media.

"The censorship bureau has systematically rejected articles in which the protests against cost of living increases have been covered in an independent manner," it said in a statement.

The crackdown on activists has drawn widespread condemnation. On Thursday, the Hong-Kong based Asian Human Rights Commission urged the Buddhist community worldwide to join with monks in Myanmar to boycott anybody from or associated with its military regime.