[앵커]
In Myanmar, where protests by the rebels continued after the coup, three people were shot by police, and one fell in serious condition. However, some police have joined the protesters, and younger generations are leading the protests using social media as a weapon.
This is reporter Kim Ji-ah.
[기자]
After the gunfire sounds, a woman in a red suit falls.
This video has spread rapidly on Myanmar social media from the afternoon of the 9th local time.
The person in the video is known as a 19-year-old student.
Local media reported that a woman in Nepido was shot in the head and was being treated in an intensive care unit.
Two men were also shot in arms and chest, respectively.
Photographs of police aiming their guns at the protesters, enlarged photographs of them, and photographs of casings also spread.
Unlike their parents, Generation Z, the children of the generations of democratization protests in 1988, are actively using social media.
[쉐레 웨이/미얀마 유학생 : 이 시위에 대한 내용은 (현지 방송에서) 하나도 보도되지 않고 있습니다.]
The experience of the military as a child is also a driving force behind the protests.
[쉐레 웨이/미얀마 유학생 : 군부독재가 얼마나 잔인한지 알고, 기회조차 없었던 삶을 살아왔기 때문에 다시 군부 밑에 있는 걸 저희가 많이 반대하는 것 같아요.]
After performing the funeral performance of Supreme Commander Min Aung Hlaing, who caused the coup, there were protesters who took off their jackets and wore dresses.
[흐텟 샤코/양곤 시위 참가자 : 군부는 잔인한 방법을 썼지만 우리 젊은이들은 평화로운 시위를 이끌어갈 겁니다.]
Some police also joined the protesters.
Lieutenant Aung Ko Ko made a statement saying, “If the fight for democracy is not successful, you have to live in prison, but it is worth fighting for democracy.”
The UN Human Rights Council decided to hold an emergency meeting on the 12th to discuss the situation in Myanmar.
(Screen provided: Twitter walone4·Myanmar NOW, Twitter’walone4′)
(Video Design: Bae Jang-geun)