Attacks on civilians and violence against civilians have increased after a military coup in Myanmar. The general public's anger against this is increasing. The army is committing atrocities on the people, in protest against which people have taken up arms in many areas. Now slowly the danger of civil war is increasing here. The High Commissioner for Human Rights to the United Nations (UN) Michelle Bachelet has given this warning.
The military carried out a coup in Myanmar on the midnight of 1 February. Many leaders were arrested there, including popular leader and State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint. Since then, there have been protests against the army all over the country.
The army is using force on the people who have come out on the streets. Bachelet said that some 900 people have been killed in the violence after the coup here. About 2 lakh people have been forced to leave their homes. The long-running conflict in the border areas of the country has intensified. Violence has erupted again in Kachin, Kayin and the northern Shan states. There was peace for many years in the Chin and Kaya states, but here also people have taken up arms.
Bachelet has appealed that other countries should put pressure on Myanmar's military, so that attacks on people can be stopped. He said that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) had prepared a road map for Myanmar in April. The consensus reached among the ASEAN countries is important but it needs to be acted upon quickly.
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