Hundreds of riot police and soldiers ringed a monument in central Rangoon today as officials gathered to commemorate the shooting death 61 years ago of Burma opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s father.
Burma's independence hero General Aung San and other government leaders were assassinated by gunmen during a Cabinet meeting on July 19th, 1947, shortly after Britain granted independence to the Southeast Asian colony.
Flags were flown at half mast in the capital throughout the day today - a state holiday in Burma.
Unlike past occasions, foreign diplomats were not invited to the tightly guarded wreath-laying ceremony at the Martyr's monument located near the famed Shwedagon pagoda.
Opposition activists have suggested that the ruling military junta is trying to downgrade the importance of Aung San's legacy as a way of undercutting the popularity of his daughter, who is under house arrest.
But diplomats in Rangoon said the Foreign Ministry had informed them that the government intended this year to hold a low-key ceremony because it comes just two-and-a-half months after Cyclone Nargis devastated much of the region south of Rangoon, leaving 85,000 people dead and about 50,000 missing.
Police cordoned off the monument, putting up heavy metal barriers and coils of barbed wire across roads.
Dozens of drenched policemen carrying assault rifles and shotguns manned the barricades during a heavy downpour.
Security was also tight around the headquarters of Ms Suu Kyi's political party, the National League for Democracy, which said it would hold a separate ceremony.
AP
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