‘They can kill me’: Nun kneels before Myanmar police in plea against shooting

Sr Ann Rose Nu Tawng said she received assurances but gunfire started soon afterwards

Sr Ann Rose Nu Tawng pleads with police not to harm protesters in Myitkyina, in Myanmar’s Kachin state, amid a crackdown on demonstrations against the military coup. Photograph: Myitkyina News Journal/AFP/Getty
Sr Ann Rose Nu Tawng pleads with police not to harm protesters in Myitkyina, in Myanmar’s Kachin state, amid a crackdown on demonstrations against the military coup. Photograph: Myitkyina News Journal/AFP/Getty

A nun went down on her knees in front of policemen in a northern Myanmar town and pleaded with them to stop shooting protesters agitating against the coup, which took place last month.

Ultimately, however, she did not succeed.

Video footage showed Sr Ann Rose Nu Tawng in a white robe and black habit kneeling on a street in the town of Myitkyina on Monday, speaking to two policemen who were also kneeling.

“I begged them not to hurt the protesters, but to treat them kindly like family members,” she told Reuters in a telephone interview.

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“I told them that they can kill me, I am not standing up until they give their promise that they will not brutally crack down on protesters.”

Sr Tawng, who runs a clinic in the town, said she had received assurances from senior officers that they were just clearing the road.

Gunfire started

Sr Tawng and one of the policemen are seen touching their foreheads to the ground, but gunfire started soon afterwards.

“We heard loud gunshots... and there was a river of blood on the street,” Sr Tawng said.

At least two protesters were killed and several others injured, she and other witnesses said.

A military spokesman and police in Myitkyina did not respond to requests for comment.

Sr Tawng said she tried to bring some of the victims to the clinic before she was blinded by tear gas.

“Our clinic floor became a sea of blood,” she said. “We need to value life. It made me feel so sad.”

The nun had also come between protesters and police lines late last month, pleading for peace, local media reported.

Over 60 people have been killed and more than 1,800 detained in the crackdown on protests against the February 1st coup, an advocacy group has said. – Reuters