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Appears in Newsflare picks
00:46
Myanmar: injured treated at scene after police open fire killing at least two protesters
Footage shows protesters being treated after police used live ammo reportedly killing at least two people and injuring several others during unrest today (Feb 20) in Myanmar.
Security forces sparked chaotic scenes when they opened fire on villagers following the unrest in Mandalay.
Several injured people were taken away and bodies were reportedly carried from the scene.
Angry locals then made a roadblock with metal drums, wooden benches and other scrap as they hit the items with planks of wood and yelled anti-military chants.
The violent scenes came after villagers protesting against the military coup in the country tried to stop a ship leaving the Yadanarbon Jetty - part of a nationwide campaign of unrest that started after the military ousted Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1.
Police then allegedly retaliated with rubber bullets and live rounds. Gunshots and automatic weapons can be heard being fired in the video.
Some locals fired sling shots at the security forces and objects were thrown at them. The video filmer - who said he witnessed people being shot - said that there were at least 15 rounds fired.
Onlookers said that at least seven people were injured - some seriously - with pools of blood being seen on the ground.
‘The situation was intense,’ said the photographer who recorded the video.
‘The police reacted aggressively. There are bodies being carried away. I think that three people were dead.'
Locals said the confrontation was sparked after staff from a shipping company joined the Civil Disobedience Movement - a nationwide attempt to force the government to release Aung San Suu Kyi - but were this morning forced to return to work.
There was a confrontation shortly afterwards before reinforcements of police and military trucks arrived at the scene and chaos followed, with shots being fired.
The brutal scenes came days after a mass protest where thousands of drivers blocked roads as part of the Civil Disobedience Movement' attempt to cripple infrastructure and force army chiefs to back down, after they seized power on February 1.
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