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Myanmar prison: Visitors among at least eight killed in blasts at Insein jail | Myanmar prison: Visitors among at least eight killed in blasts at Insein jail |
(about 2 hours later) | |
File photo: People waiting outside Insein Prison | File photo: People waiting outside Insein Prison |
At least eight people have been killed in explosions at Myanmar's notorious Insein prison in Yangon. | At least eight people have been killed in explosions at Myanmar's notorious Insein prison in Yangon. |
Locals told BBC Burmese two parcel bombs went off at the entrance to the jail on Wednesday morning, killing three prison staff and five visitors. | Locals told BBC Burmese two parcel bombs went off at the entrance to the jail on Wednesday morning, killing three prison staff and five visitors. |
Insein prison is the country's largest jail housing about 10,000 prisoners, many of whom are political prisoners. | |
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack yet. Eighteen other people were injured, officials confirmed. | |
The authorities said the bombs had gone off in the prison's post room. Another bomb - which did not detonate - was later found there wrapped in a plastic bag. | |
All five of the visitors who were killed were women and relatives of prisoners, the authorities confirmed. | |
One was the mother of student leader Ko James who was arrested by Myanmar's military authorities last June. She had been visiting the prison to deliver a rice box to her son during the week of his court hearing. | |
Insein prison is a vast, heavily-guarded complex on the outskirts of the former capital. | |
The century-old prison is infamous for its harsh conditions and inhumane treatment of prisoners, rights groups say. | The century-old prison is infamous for its harsh conditions and inhumane treatment of prisoners, rights groups say. |
Myanmar is currently run by a military junta which toppled Aung San Suu Kyi's elected civilian government last year in a violent coup. | Myanmar is currently run by a military junta which toppled Aung San Suu Kyi's elected civilian government last year in a violent coup. |
Tortured to death: Myanmar mass killings revealed | Tortured to death: Myanmar mass killings revealed |
Why is Myanmar's military so brutal? | Why is Myanmar's military so brutal? |
However the junta faces stiff resistance in large parts of the country where there is an active guerrilla front known as the People's Defence Force (PDF). | |
In Yangon, there have been frequent bomb attacks, most of them small, since the military crushed the mass protest movement against its coup last year. | |
These have usually targeted individuals viewed as collaborating with the military - such as government officials, alleged informers and more recently air force pilots accused of taking part in aerial attacks on villages which are resisting military rule. | |
There have also been assassination attempts, drive-by shootings and, as attitudes have hardened, beheadings in rural areas which are blamed on both sides | |
The extent of deadly fighting and battles this year have been indicative of a civil war, observers say. | The extent of deadly fighting and battles this year have been indicative of a civil war, observers say. |