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Rangoon University Student Union massacre : ウィキペディア英語版
1962 Rangoon University protests

The 1962
Rangoon University protests were a series of marches,
demonstrations, and protests against stricter
campus regulations, the end of the system of university self-administration, and
the policy of the new military regime of General Ne Win. The main events took place in Rangoon,
Burma (Myanmar) on
7–8 July 1962.
On July 7, 1962, the military regime violently suppressed
a student demonstration at Rangoon University attended by some 2,000 students with
military forces resulting in the death of more than hundred and the arrest of
more than 3,000 students according to unofficial but reliable sources. However,
official government statements put the death toll at 15. In the morning hours
of the next day, the military regime blew up the historic Rangoon University
Student Union (RUSU) building, which had been the symbol of the anti-colonial
nationalism struggle since the 1920s.
The reaction of the military regime disclosed for
the first time its new tough stance against all regime opponents as part of implementing
the new state ideology, the Burmese Way to Socialism, which included to
bring "almost all of Burma's political, social, and economic life under
strict military control". It also demonstrated that the
effective suppression of student activism and the de-politicisation of the universities
ranked high among the strategic goals of the new government as students had
been in the vanguard of the Burmese anti-colonial nationalist struggle ever
since the first student protests in Burma started in 1920. Although the regime
had been successful in ending the student protests, the violent reaction
nonetheless undermined its support among the broader population and created a
symbolic focal point for later student protests in the following decades.
In the aftermath of the violent crackdown on the
student protests, the Government of Ne Win immediately closed all universities
for four months and send all students home.〔 Broad institutional reforms introduced by the 1964 University Education Act,
then, brought Burma’s universities under strict government control and
profoundly hampered cohesive open student activism in subsequent decades. In this respect, the result
of the 1962 Rangoon University protests ushered a new era of underground
student activism in which open mass student involvement in national politics
erupted only sporadically, most prominently during the student protests of the mid-1970s
and during the 8888 Uprising in 1988.
The reverberation of the events on 7–8 July 1962
can be felt to this day. Not only did General Ne Win prominently illustrate the
continuing symbolic power associated with the protests when he referred in his
departure speech in 1988 to the destruction of the RUSU building as “one of the
key episodes” during his time in power. But also as recently as 2012 around
14 persons were “taken into custody by local authorities () to prevent them from
going ahead with planned events to mark the 50th anniversary” of the 7 July incidents.
==Background==
Ever since Rangoon University was founded in
1920 as the first university in the British colony of Burma, student
activism persistently influenced the development of Burma throughout entirely
different regimes.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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