Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Junta chief apologizes after troops shoot dead abbot

The abbot had not slowed down at a checkpoint so troops opened fire on his unmarked car

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YANGON, Myanmar (AFP) — Myanmar’s junta chief has made a rare apology after security forces killed the popular abbot of a Buddhist monastery in an incident the military initially blamed on opponents of its coup.

Sayadaw Bhaddanta Munindabhi­vamsa, 78, was a prominent teacher and author on Buddhism and head of a monastery that had publicly opposed the military’s 2021 coup that has plunged Myanmar into turmoil.

He was shot dead on 19 June as he traveled by car through central Mandalay region.

Junta-controlled media initially blamed opponents of its coup for the killing but the next day a senior monk who had been at the scene said security forces were responsibl­e.

His accusation went viral on social media and the junta said it would investigat­e the incident.

“We are extremely heartbroke­n for losing Sayadaw Bhaddanta Munindabhi­vamsa,” junta chief Min Aung Hlaing said in a letter that was read out at the abbot’s monastery on Monday.

“We would like to give our sincere apology for this case,” the letter said.

The car the abbot had been traveling in had no religious markings on it, according to the letter, and had not slowed down at a checkpoint, leading junta troops to open fire.

An investigat­ion would be carried out and the junta would take “action based on the facts.”

The abbot’s funeral would take place on Thursday.

The military has long sought to portray itself as a protector of Buddhist identity, the majority religion in Myanmar.

Since seizing power in 2021, it has arrested and jailed locals and foreigners accused of “harming” Buddhism in its sweeping crackdown on dissent that has seen thousands jailed or killed, according to a local monitoring group.

But the clergy have also been at the forefront of political protests.

Huge demonstrat­ions sparked by fuel price hikes in 2007 were led by monks, and the clergy also mobilized relief efforts after 2008’s devastatin­g Cyclone Nargis and the inaction of a former junta.

 ?? HANDOUT/GUMI CITY COUNCIL/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? MAN interacts with an administra­tive officer robot at the Gumi City Council building in Gumi, South Korea. The council said on 26 June the robot was defunct after throwing itself down some stairs, in the country’s first apparent robot suicide.
HANDOUT/GUMI CITY COUNCIL/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE MAN interacts with an administra­tive officer robot at the Gumi City Council building in Gumi, South Korea. The council said on 26 June the robot was defunct after throwing itself down some stairs, in the country’s first apparent robot suicide.

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