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'Spirit To Fight': Inside The Labor, Minority Rights Roots Of Myanmar's Protests

Many of those who led the first protests against Myanmar's coup were minority rights activists, garment workers, student groups and others who had butted heads with Aung San Suu Kyi and her party.
People hold candles and make a three-finger salute in a market on Feb. 5 in Yangon, Myanmar. People in Myanmar continue to take part in acts of civil disobedience in protest against the Feb. 1 military coup.

YANGON, Myanmar — When minority rights activist Esther Ze Naw prepared for Yangon's first major anti-coup protest on Feb. 6, she was well aware of the possibility that security forces might open fire, as they had done in the past.

"There is no one who is not afraid of that, but at the time I was more afraid that people would not turn out. I was more afraid that people would not come out on the streets if something happened that day," she says.

Fears of a low turnout were unfounded. Following that protest, which drew a crowd of some 5,000, Yangon and other parts of Myanmar exploded in weeks of mass demonstrations as millions took to the streets to demand democracy and defy the Feb. 1 military coup, launched the day before the new parliament was set to be sworn in.

The majority of Myanmar's protesters are supporters of the National League for Democracy party and its

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