Internet blackout On 4 February 2021, telecom operators and internet service providers across Myanmar were ordered to block
Facebook until 7February 2021, to ensure the "country's stability".
Myanma Posts and Telecommunications (MPT), a state-owned carrier, also blocked
Facebook Messenger,
Instagram and
WhatsApp services, while
Telenor Myanmar blocked only Facebook. The following day, the government extended the social media access ban to include Instagram and Twitter. Following the Facebook ban, demand for
VPN services surged in the country. According to a UK-based digital privacy and security research group, demand for VPN surged by more than 7000%. On the morning of 6 February 2021, the military authorities initiated an
internet outage nationwide. That same day, Facebook urged authorities to unblock social media services. Facebook also removed the Burmese government's ability to submit content removal requests. Internet access was partially restored the following day, although social media platforms remained blocked. On 14 February 2021, Telenor announced it was no longer permitted to publicly disclose the directives received from military authorities on internet disruptions. Starting on 15 February 2021, the military authorities initiated an
internet outage nationwide again from 1:00 to 9:00a.m. daily. Additional internet shutdowns were also reported on 22 and 26 February 2021 in some locations.
Mytel, partly shared by the military, was seemingly not affected by the shutdowns. with fixed-line connections which are disconnected from 1AM to 9AM being the only avenue left to access the internet.
Arrests and charges Law enforcement authorities have acted swiftly in quelling opposition to the coup. As of 7February 2021, 152 people were under detention in relation to the coup d'état. The military regime has begun initiating criminal proceedings against detainees. On 3February 2021, Thawbita, a Buddhist monk, was sentenced to two years in prison under Section 66(d) of the Telecommunications Law, for defamation of the military. On 4February 2021, three university students, Zu Zu Zan, Aung Myo Ko, and Htoo Khant Thaw, were charged under Section 19 of the Peaceful Assembly and Peaceful Procession Law for protesting in Mandalay. NLD leader
Win Htein was charged under Section 124(a) of Myanmar's legal code for
sedition. On 8 February 2021, authorities re-arrested
Nang Khin Htwe Myint, Kayin State's chief minister, and
Myint Naing, Sagaing Region's chief minister. Nang Khin Htwe Myint had published remarks online urging solidarity between soldiers and the people, pointing out that the army was funded by taxes and state funds, while Myint Naing had posted a speech calling on the public to continue protesting. On 13 February 2021, authorities have charged and issued arrest warrants under Article 505(b) of the law for seven high-profile individuals, namely
Min Ko Naing,
Kyaw Min Yu,
Mg Mg Aye,
Pencilo, Lynn Lynn, Insein Aung Soe, and
Myo Yan Naung Thein, for allegedly defaming the state and threatening "public tranquility" through their social media posts. On 17 February 2021, authorities issued arrest warrants for several celebrities, namely
Lu Min,
Pyay Ti Oo, Ko Pauk, Na Gyi, Anegga, and
Wyne, for encouraging civil servants to join the ongoing civil disobedience movement. More than 1,700 people had been arrested as of 4March. On 2 April 2021, eleven individuals were arrested in Yangon after answering questions from a
CNN television crew which had received permission to report in Myanmar, with three of these individuals still held . On 24 March 2021, Thein Zaw was released from
Insein Prison near Yangon, with all charges dropped. On 15 April 2021, security forces arrested
Wai Moe Naing, one of the most prominent leaders of the protests, near the town of
Monywa. On 9 May 2021, the junta returned the body of poet and dissenter Khet Thi, who they said had died in detention.
Inclusion of opposition political parties The military has made overtures to competing political parties in the aftermath of the coup d'état. On 3February 2021, five additional civilian members were added to the Council, including
Aye Nu Sein, vice-chair of the
Arakan National Party. On 6February, the
Mon Unity Party had announced it had accepted the military's offer to join the Council.
Imposition of martial law On 8 February 2021, authorities began imposing
martial law across several municipalities until further notice. Martial law effectively institutes a nightly curfew from 8:00pm to 4:00am, bans gathering of more than five individuals, public speaking, rallies, and protests. On 14 February 2021, the military regime suspended security and privacy protections enshrined in Myanmar's constitution until the state of emergency is lifted. The newly passed law enables the Commander-in-Chief to temporarily restrict or suspend the fundamental rights of citizens, including arrests and searches without court-issued warrants, and detentions without court approval. The junta's indiscriminate use of force has resulted in the deaths of at least 44 children, including a 7-year-old girl who was shot in her home and reports of hundreds of children and young people detained. On 8 February 2021, police began using
rubber bullets,
water cannons, and
tear gas to disperse protesters at mass rallies. The military leader
Min Aung Hlaing ordered a clampdown and suppression of demonstrations as protesters nationwide embarked on a strike. On 9February two protesters in Naypyidaw were admitted to a local hospital in critical condition, for gunshot wounds. One of these was
Mya Thwe Thwe Khine, a twenty-year-old woman, whose death in a hospital on 19 February, became emblematic for the cause of the protesters. In late April, police sources began to claim that the increased violence from apparently among their ranks had actually been the work of military personnel and paramilitary thugs in police uniform, as well as of "trigger-happy new police recruits". On 20 February 2021, two protesters were killed and at least two dozen more were injured in
Mandalay by the police and military in a violent crackdown. These people were residents of Maha Aung Myay Township guarding government shipyard workers involved in the civil disobedience movement from the police, who were forcing them back to work. In addition to firing live rounds, the police and military personnel also threw rocks, arrested, and used water cannons on civilians, in addition to severely beating many. Despite international reactions to this incident, the military junta warned protesters that they were willing to continue using such lethal force, and instead claimed that it was the protesters who were "inciting the people [...] to a confrontation path". In spite of these threats, huge crowds gathered on 22 February, with some protesters saying that the recent killings had made them more determined to continue protesting. The intensity of the interventions by authorities increased at the beginning of March, with reports of at least 18 fatalities on 28 February according to reports of Human Rights Groups, and an additional 38 on 3March, with UN special envoy
Christine Schraner Burgener describing the day "as the bloodiest since the coup happened". Warnings of possible further sanctions were reportedly met with indifference. On 4 March 2021, 19-year-old
Kyal Sin was shot in the head during an anti-coup rally, in which security forces fired live rounds to disperse the demonstration. One incident of violence against emergency services personnel was recorded by CCTV and shared on social media, in which an ambulance in the
North Okkakapa Township,
Yangon was stopped at gunpoint by armed police, and the three volunteer medics were forced out of their vehicles and repeatedly hit in the head with rifle butts and kicked by six police officers, followed by the officers shooting out the windows of the ambulance. The three medics were then detained and sent to the
Insein Prison, known for its inhumane conditions. On 9 April, the
Assistance Association for Political Prisoners and
Myanmar Now reported that security forces
had killed more than 80 protesters in
Bago by firing
rifle grenades at them. On 11 April, the country surpassed 700 deaths since the protests began, according to the AAPP. On the same day, a man was shot dead by security forces in
Mandalay, becoming the first casualty of the post-ASEAN summit consensus. On 1 June, the Tatmadaw launched airstrikes on many towns in Sagaing and Kachin State against People's Defence Force resistance group. On 5 December, five people were run over and killed by a military vehicle in
Yangon.
Response to use of force The violent use of force by military forces in Mya Thwe Thwe Khaing's death on 9February sparked national outrage, with celebrities and public figures such as Thandar Hlaing criticising her treatment. Nyi Nyi Tun, the chair of the
Myanmar Motion Picture Organisation, stated "We cannot witness any more Mya Thwe Thwe Khaings" and urged the public to join the civil disobedience movement. On 11 February, Mya's sister, Mya Thado Nwe, publicly addressed media outlets, and urged the public to "uproot the military dictatorship" for the sake of future generations. On 17 February, a long billboard depicting Mya's shooting was unfurled off of a pedestrian bridge in Downtown
Yangon. 's pictures with woman's
htameins
Vasipake Sayadaw, an influential monk and astrologer who having a close relationship with Senior General Min Aung Hlaing. He has been accused of providing the coup leader with his astrological advice for the takeover. He was reportedly blamed for advising the senior general to tell security forces to shoot protesters in the head. Most of the people killed over the last month were hit in their heads. The
Shwekyin Nikāya, Burma's second largest
Buddhist monastic order, has also urged Min Aung Hlaing to immediately cease the assaults on unarmed civilians and to refrain from engaging in theft and
property destruction. Its leading monks reminded the general to be a good Buddhist, On 14 March, it was reported that Bhaddanta Kumārabhivaṁsa (), the committee's head, had consequently been detained. Other members as well of the Burmese
monastic community have spoken out against the violence and in general opposition to the coup.
Military deployment and occupation of buildings On 14 February, the military deployed armoured trucks and vehicles in the regional capitals of
Yangon,
Sittwe, and
Myitkyina. Soldiers were also deployed on city streets to aid police, including members of the 77th Light Infantry Division. On 7 March, state-run media and human rights groups confirmed the occupation of public hospitals, universities and temple compounds by security forces. Public hospitals had been staffed by medical personnel after initially being vacated over the Civil Disobedience Movement, "in response to escalating violence against peaceful protestors" according to
not-for-profit human rights NGO Physicians for Human Rights. Hospitals confirmed to be occupied include the
Yangon General Hospital and
Gandhi Hospital.
Wai Wai Nu of the Women's Peace Network noted the potential for violent attacks on pro-democracy protesters by pro-military protesters. On 30 December, approximately 400 pro-military protesters and nationalists demonstrated in front of
Yangon City Hall, in violation of COVID-19 guidelines. On 14 January, about a thousand protesters gathered in Mandalay's
Pyawbwe Township to dispute election results, waving military flags. On 2 February 2021, the day after the coup, pro-military protesters and nationalist groups such as the Yeomanry Development Party (YDP) and Patriotic Myanmar Monks Network rallied in Yangon. On 8February, a group of pro-military protesters rallied at Sule Pagoda. Many brandished large wooden clubs, and were otherwise indistinguishable from pro-democracy protesters. On 25 February, pro-military supporters marched through central Yangon and openly attacked bystanders, residents and anti-coup protestors using sharp objects, knives, heavy sticks and slingshots, wounding four people seriously in the head and the other eight in other parts of the body. Attacks were also directed against members of the press and cars. The draft bill would make internet providers accountable for preventing or removing content that "cause[s] hatred, destroy unity and tranquility". On 11 February, hundreds of protesters gathered at the Embassy of China in Yangon, based on online rumours that China had brought in telecommunications equipment and IT experts to Myanmar via recent flights. The Chinese embassy published a statement from the China Enterprises Chamber of Commerce in Myanmar which claimed that recent cargo flights had transported only goods like seafood, and denied allegations of helping Myanmar build an internet firewall.
Media blackout Since the coup on 1 February 2021, authorities have blocked popular news channels, including free-to-air channels like the
Democratic Voice of Burma and
Mizzima TV, as well as foreign news channels, including CNN from the United States, NHK from Japan, and the BBC from the United Kingdom. On 7February, the regime also blocked
The New York Times,
The Wall Street Journal,
The Economist and two wire services, the
Associated Press and
Reuters. and others including
Associated Press journalist Thein Zaw have been arrested and charged under a public order law with a maximum penalty of three years in prison, punishing anyone who "causes fear among the public, knowingly spreads false news, or agitates directly or indirectly for a criminal offense against a government employee", with the penalty having been increased by the junta from two years in February; On 2 April 2021, eleven individuals were arrested in Yangon for answering questions by a CNN television crew which had received permission to report in Myanmar.
Spread of misinformation Unsubstantiated rumours of Suu Kyi's release had circulated, which was falsely attributed to and denied by
Radio Free Asia; this rumour is reported to have been shared by the military-run
Myawaddy TV, and triggered street celebrations and fireworks. An imposter website mimicking Radio Free Asia was set up, posting false articles "about COVID-19, the Muslim
Rohingya community, as well as slurs against leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her ruling National League for Democracy". Additionally, the military hired
Ari Ben-Menashea lobbyist who formerly worked for
Robert Mugabe, but also other military juntas and presidential candidates in countries including Venezuela, Tunisia and Kyrgyzstanin an attempt to rebrand itself, claiming that the coup was launched "to prevent the civilian-led government from drifting further into China's orbit". To counter the spread of misinformation, in February
Facebook issued a blanket ban on all pages relating to Myanmar's military, as well as state media network Myanmar Radio and Television (MRTV). On 5March,
YouTube announced it would remove five military-run YouTube channels and several videos "in accordance with our community guidelines and applicable laws".
TikTok announced it had removed content which had received "tens of thousands of views" of uniformed men threatening to harm protesters. On 6 April, military authorities issued arrest warrants against dozens of celebrities, models and influencers, and a popular comedian was arrested in Yangon, according to
Mizzima News. One of the wanted journalists is
Sithu Aung Myint, who wrote from his
Facebook page that "he was proud" to be on the wanted list. On 8 April, troops arrested popular actor, model and actor
Paing Takhon for openly opposing the military government and expressing support for the protesters. He was arrested at his home in Yangon after eight military trucks arrived to their residence. The arrests were conducted without resistance, according to Takhon's mother, due to Takhon being in poor health. Other 120 celebrities were also issued arrest warrants. On 13 May 2021, Min Nyo of the
Democratic Voice of Burma was sentenced to three years in prison for his coverage of the protests. His employer and family allege he was "brutally beaten" by police and denied family visits. He had been arrested on 3 March. He became the first journalist to be sentenced under the junta. In May 2021, three journalists and two activists who escaped from Myanmar were arrested in Thailand for illegally entering the country. If found guilty, they could be deported back to Myanmar, where they allege their lives may be in danger. On 16 May 2021, Thai Prime Minister
Prayuth Chan-ocha promised UN special envoy
Christine Schraner Burgener that the Thai government will not force those fleeing violence to return to Myanmar. == Protests ==