Myanmar arrests mount

YANGON, Myanmar — Myanmar’s military leaders said weapons had been seized from Buddhist monasteries and announced dozens of new arrests Sunday, defying global outrage over violent repression of protestors who sought an end to 45 years of dictatorship.

Recent raids on monasteries turned up guns, knives and ammunition, though it was not yet clear to whom they belonged, according to The New Light of Myanmar, a mouthpiece of the junta. The government threatened to punish any monks who violate the law, stepping up pressure on clerics who led the protests.

“Monks must adhere to the laws of God and the government,” the paper wrote. “If they violate those laws, action could be taken against them.”

Security eased in the largest city of Yangon more than a week after soldiers and police opened fire on demonstrators. Some roadblocks were removed and visitors began trickling back to the heavily guarded Shwedagon and Sule pagodas, the starting and finishing points of protests that began in mid-August over a sharp fuel price increase.

The junta says at least 10 people were killed in its Sept. 26-27 crackdown — though independent sources say the toll was likely much higher — and that about 1,000 remain in detention centers.

At least 135 monks are being held, according to The New Light of Myanmar.

In addition, 78 more people suspected of involvement in the rallies were being questioned by investigators, it said.

Tens of thousands of people turned out for last month’s protests, the biggest in nearly two decades against brutal military rule. The junta’s bloody crackdown sparked international condemnation.

The United States has warned that it would push for U.N. sanctions against Myanmar if it fails to move toward democracy.

China and Russia, however, have expressed opposition to any such action and Myanmar’s Foreign Minister Nyan Win told the U.N. General Assembly last week democracy “cannot be imposed from outside.”

The junta’s propaganda machine, meanwhile, continued to claim massive rallies across the country, allegedly in support of the government. Such rallies are widely believed to be stage-managed by the government, with every family in the district forced to contribute one or two members.

The military has ruled Myanmar since 1962. The current junta came to power after routing a 1988 pro-democracy uprising, killing at least 3,000 people.

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