Yangon

Myanmar authorities have gradually ramped up the use of force to disperse protests against the military coup. (Ye Aung Thu / AFP)

Smoke, rubble and gunshot wounds have conjured images of Yangon neighbourhoods as “battlegrounds” this week, and though the term helps emphasise the severity of the situation, it can also be slightly misleading.

Myanmar citizens in Yangon clatter tins and pans to make noise to protest a military coup that toppled the civilian-led government. (AFP)

Pots and pans could be heard well past the usual 8pm chorus last night as Yangon neighbours protected each other from midnight arrests that have accelerated over recent days.

People give hold up three-finger salutes, after calls for protest against the military coup emerged on social media, in Yangon on February 4, 2021. (STR / AFP)

Yangon protestors raising the three-finger salute of resistance called for the fall of the military regime in flash protests across the city yesterday.

People clashed pots and pans at 8pm on February 2 -- a peaceful protest against the Myanmar military coup. (Myanmar Mix)

It started with a few candles illuminating Yangon balconies at about 6pm and ended with a crescendo of clashing pots and pans – a rejection of the military coup so thunderous that the sound may well have reached Naypyidaw.

Members of activist group Yangon Bikers’ Revolution campaign near Pansodan Jetty in Yangon on January 18. (Supplied)

Activist group Yangon Bikers’ Revolution sent a petition of 8,000 signatures calling for the legalisation of motorbikes in the city to the country's leaders.

A fire at Myay Pade Thar Island in Kandawgyi Park on January 14. (Myanmar Fire Services Department)

Yangonites in the downtown area may have noticed a flurry of ambulances and fire crews racing north last night – they were heading to a large blaze in Kandawgyi Park.

Sule Shangri-La announced it would close its doors for at least nine months due to the Covid-19 impact. (Supplied)

One of Yangon’s most well-known hotels, Sule Shangri-La, announced today it will close for at least nine months, as it struggles with the Covid-19 impact.

(L-R) A man wearing a mask waits at Yangon Central Railway Station and Myint Hlaing, who has been stranded in Yangon for months. (Supplied)

A community of strangers, either stranded in the city or financially ruined by the pandemic, gather at Yangon Central Railway Station for free meals.

The Tourist Burma building in downtown Yangon is one of two new Covid testing centres. (Turquoise Mountain)

Now domestic flights are running again, passengers must be tested 36 hours before taking off and show a negative test certificate before boarding.

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