Suu Kyi defends protest-hit mine project.

MONYWA -- Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi urged protesters Wednesday to accept a controversial Chinese-backed mine that was the scene of a violent crackdown last year, or risk hurting the economy, reports AFP.

The Nobel laureate, visiting villages near the mine in Monywa, northern Myanmar, said local people and the wider economy would suffer if the project was stopped, despite fears about the environment and land grabbing. A parliamentary report overseen by Suu Kyi-released on Tuesday-said police used phosphorus against demonstrators at the mine last year in the harshest crackdown on protesters since the end of military rule.

However, the probe into the November clampdown, which left dozens wounded including monks, recommended the mine project should not be scrapped, despite conceding it only brought "slight" benefits to the nation.

"If we stop this project, it will not benefit local people or the country," Suu Kyi told around 200-300 villagers on Wednesday, many of whom apparently had yet to hear the probe's findings. "The...

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