
Deng Jia Xi, a 19-year-old shot dead during protests in Myanmar
Credit: Facebook
In one photo, the young woman crouches among fellow anti-coup protesters looking defiantly towards Myanmar’s security forces, wearing a black T-shirt that says ‘everything will be ok’.
Minutes later, she was dead — another young life suddenly snuffed out simply for demanding democracy.
A second photo of her lifeless body, stretched out on a gurney with blood oozing from her head, joined many other horrific images flooding out of Myanmar on Wednesday, documenting at least nine more victims of violent military crackdowns on peaceful rallies across the Southeast Asian nation.
Myanmar’s security forces are increasingly turning to lethal force, and apparently shooting to kill with impunity, as they try to stem the relentless tide of protests against the Feb. 1 military takeover that ousted and detained the country’s civilian leadership.
The young woman was said to be just 19 and named on social media and by local journalists as Deng Jia Xi. In her final Facebook post on Sunday – when at least 18 died in the nation’s bloodiest protests to date – she offered to donate blood to anyone who needed it.

Deng Jia Xi, wearing a t-shirt saying 'everything will be ok' was reported to be among the protesters who died on Wednesday
The post gained 127,000 likes within hours as tributes poured in following news of her death in Mandalay, Myanmar’s second biggest city.
Many protesters are now resorting to writing their emergency contact numbers and blood types on their forearms in the event that they are killed or need urgent medical care.
According to local media accounts and Reuters, two people were killed in Mandalay and one in the commercial city of Yangon when police opened fire on Wednesday. The Monywa Gazette also reported five people killed in local protests.
Another demonstrator was shot dead in the central town of Myingyan, according to student activist Moe Myint Hein, 25.
“They opened fire on us with live bullets. One was killed, he’s young, a teenage boy, shot in the head,” Moe Myint Hein, who was wounded in the leg, told Reuters by telephone. Graphic images also circulated of his bloodied body next to weeping loved ones.
Additional shocking footage, which could not be independently verified but which spread rapidly on social media, showed medics being beaten by police officers, bodies being dragged by the security forces, and a soldier shooting at residents of a building for filming a patrol.

A protester in Yangon holds a homemade shield while running during a demonstration against the military coup
Credit: AFP
The security forces brutality was meted out a day after a regional diplomatic push to end the month-long crisis made little progress. Myanmar’s Asian neighbours pressed its military regime on Tuesday to release detained civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and stop violence against opponents of the coup.
Britain has called for the United Nations Security Council to meet on Friday to address the spiralling violence as soldiers and police officers steadily step their use of tear gas, water cannons, rubber bullets and live rounds.
At London’s proposal, the UNSC meeting would take place behind closed doors on Friday afternoon.
However, the military regime has so far paid scant attention to repeated strong condemnations by the international community of the coup and demands for a peaceful democratic transition.
While Facebook, one of the most popular social media sites in Myanmar, has banned the military and taken a robust stance against incitement to violence, many soldiers are reportedly turning to TikTok to film threats to protesters.
In a statement to Vice World News, TikTok said that it is “committed to promoting a safe and welcoming app environment” on its platform, but did not comment directly on the videos featuring Myanmar security forces.
“We have clear Community Guidelines that state we do not allow content that incites violence or misinformation that causes harm to individuals, our community, or the larger public. TikTok will continue to follow these principles globally,” the statement said.































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