" ယူနီကုတ်နှင့် ဖော်ဂျီ ဖောင့် နှစ်မျိုးစလုံးဖြင့် ဖတ်နိုင်အောင်( ၂၁-၀၂-၂၀၂၂ ) မှစ၍ဖတ်ရှုနိုင်ပါပြီ။ (  Microsoft Chrome ကို အသုံးပြုပါ ) "
Showing posts with label 2021. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2021. Show all posts

Sunday, July 4, 2021

ရခိုင်တို့အတွက် AA လား၊ နစကလား၊ NUG လား

ဖက်ဒရယ်ဂျာနယ်
20 ဇွန်လ 2021
ပြီးခဲ့သည့် ဖေဖော်ဝါရီလ ၁ ရက်နေ့တွင် တပ်မတော်က NLD အစိုးရထံမှ အာဏာသိမ်းယူအပြီး မြန်မာနိုင်ငံ ကို နိုင်ငံတော်စီမံအုပ်ချုပ်ရေးကောင်စီ (နစက)အစိုးရအဖြစ်ဖြင့် အုပ်ချုပ်လျက်ရှိနေသည်။ယင်းသို့အုပ်ချုပ်နေ သည် မှာ ၂ လခွဲကြာမြင့်လာပြီးနောက် နစကအစိုးရနှင့် စင်ပြိုင်အစိုးရတစ်ရပ် မြန်မာနိုင်ငံတွင် ပေါ်ပေါက် လာခဲ့သည်။

တိုင်းရင်းသား တန်းတူရှိမှုကို ဖော်ဆောင်

ဖက်ဒရယ်ဂျာနယ်
နော်မန်ဒီ

 

လွတ်လပ်ရေးနဲ့ အတူ ဖွားဘက်တော် အဖြစ် “ပြည်တွင်းစစ်မီး” လည်း တစ်ပါတည်း ပါလာတာကြောင့် မြန် မာနိုင်ငံဟာ ပြည်တွင်းစစ်ဒဏ်ကို ခါးစည်းခံလာရတာ နှစ်ပေါင်း ၇၃ နှစ်ကြာတဲ့ အခုအချိန်ထိတိုင် ရပ်တန့်မယ့် အနေအထား မရှိသေးတဲ့ အပြင် ပိုမိုပြီး တိုးမြင့်, တောက်လောင်နေတဲ့ အခြေအနေဆိုးနဲ့ ရင်ဆိုင်နေရဆဲပါ။ ကမ္ဘာမှာ သက်တမ်း အရှည်ကြာဆုံး ဖြစ်တဲ့ မြန်မာနိုင်ငံက ပြည်တွင်းစစ်ဟာ နောက်ထပ် ဘယ်လောက် ကြာ မယ်၊ ဘာဖြစ်လာဦးမယ် ဆိုတာတွေလည်း ခန့်မှန်းလို့ မရနိုင်တဲ့ အခြေအနေမှာ ရှိနေပါတယ်။

Rohingya militancy group ARSA silently gets organized

BLITZ
Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury
July 3, 2021


Over one million Rohingya refugees, who fled extreme persecution in Myanmar may now pose serious threat to regional and international security. According to a vernacular news portal, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army or ARSA, which was formerly known as Harakahal-Yaqin has already turned into real nightmare to majority of the Rohingyas and Bangladeshi citizen.

Dhaka Post reporters Adnan Rahman and Joshim Uddin in their report said, Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) has already recruited over two thousand members from the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, where it has approximately 150 female jihadists. Majority of the ARSA recruits are based in Kutupalong and Balukhali areas in Cox’s Bazar and Teknaf district.

Myanmar: Roads to a Federal Army Are Twisted

modern diplomacy
M.D. Amin
July 2, 2021

The idea of a Federal Army for Myanmar is as old as the country’s struggle for democracy. The vision is a part of the larger picture of decentralization and democratization of the multiethnic nation of 54 million and was first seriously floated in 1988 as a counterweight to Tatmadaw and to rally the support of ethnic armed organizations (EAOs) during 8888 Uprising. The idea has recently received unprecedented momentum following the ousting of NLD-led civilian government on February 1, 2021. The formation of an EAO-supported People’s Defense Force (PDF) that amalgamates the Bamar youth with anti-junta ethnic rebels has sparked new optimism in this regard. Spontaneous attacks from civilian resistance fighters and other similar groups, such as Taze People’s Comrades, Kalay Civil Army and Chinland Defence Force have also contributed significantly to this growing interest.

Danger Awaited in Myanmar. So He Made a Daring Bid to Stay in Japan.

The New York Times
By Ben Dooley and Hisako Ueno
July 3, 2021


After defying Myanmar’s military rulers at a soccer match, Ko Pyae Lyan Aung decided to seek asylum. But he was being watched.

Ko Pyae Lyan Aung at a practice field in Osaka, Japan.Credit...Shiho Fukada for The New York Times


OSAKA, Japan — The soccer player’s plane was at the gate. Ahead of him stood his last chance at safety.

The athlete, Ko Pyae Lyan Aung, had come to Japan with Myanmar’s national team. On the field, before the first match, he had flashed a gesture of defiance — the three-finger salute made famous by “The Hunger Games” — against the military junta that had ousted his country’s elected government. He was now afraid of what might happen if he returned home.

Myanmar protesters burn junta leader's images on his birthday

Reuters
July 3, 2021
Myanmar's military ruler Min Aung Hlaing presides over an army parade on Armed Forces Day in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, March 27, 2021. REUTERS/Stringer


July 3 (Reuters) - Protesters burned mock coffins and pictures of Myanmar's army ruler Min Aung Hlaing on Saturday in the latest demonstrations against the coup over five months ago that has plunged the Southeast Asian country into chaos.

"May you not rest in peace" and "may your birthday and deathday be the same," read the messages on funeral wreaths in Theinzayet township in eastern Mon state. Similar protests took place in many parts of Myanmar.

Norway's Telenor planning to exit Myanmar

TRT WORLD
02 July 2021


The telecom giant has booked massive financial losses in a country marred by a military coup and street protests.

Telenor is one of the largest telecom operators in Myanmar that has seen a flight foreign investment this year. (AP Archive)

Norway's Telenor, a major telecom operator in Myanmar, is weighing its future in the country after booking losses following a military coup and subsequent crackdown.

The company issued a statement on Friday it following reports that it was considering the sale of its unit in the country, Telenor Myanmar.

Telenor was pushed into deep losses in the first quarter after it was forced to write down all of its assets in Myanmar, taking their value from $769 million to zero.

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Activists, Journalists Included in Myanmar Prisoner Release

THE I DIPLOMAT
July 01, 2021



The military gave no reason for the sudden release of prisoners, which included many detained since its February coup.

Myanmar’s government began releasing about 2,300 prisoners on Wednesday, including activists who were detained for protesting against the military’s seizure of power in February and journalists who reported on the protests, officials said.

Buses took prisoners out of Yangon’s Insein Prison, where friends and families of detainees had waited since morning for the announced releases. It is standard practice to take freed prisoners to the police stations where they were originally booked to complete the processing for their freedom.

Thursday, July 1, 2021

Myanmar diplomats in US and Switzerland refuse to return home after criticising military junta

South China Morning Post
29 Jun, 2021
  • Kyaw Moe Tun, Myanmar’s ambassador to the UN, said the 11 diplomats had joined the civil disobedience movement following the Feburary 1 coup
  • ‘The military [has] already charged me high treason … So I definitely cannot go back [to Myanmar],’ he said
Anti-coup protesters march in Pabedan township near Yangon. Photo: AP

Eleven Myanmar diplomats in the United States and Switzerland are creating a united front as they seek to remain in their host countries in protest against the country’s military junta, refusing to return home, the country’s ambassador to the United Nations said on Monday.

Myanmar ambassador Kyaw Moe Tun said the 11 are among around 20 diplomats in seven countries who have joined the civil disobedience movement amid the continued use of violence against protesters by Myanmar security forces since the February 1 military coup.

India and Myanmar: A Chequered Relationship through History

MONEY LIFE
Saket Hishikar 
30 June 2021

Personal encounters, at times, have the power to draw one’s attention to events in far-flung lands. The news of a military coup in Myanmar in February this year reignited the memory of my personal encounters and an attempt to make sense of the event and its implications for India.

Anyone familiar with Mumbai suburbs knows about the magnificent Golden Pagoda at Gorai. The local tour guide at the centre informs visitors about the founder of the Vipassana Kendra and his promise to his guru in Myanmar to take back the technique of Vipassana to India as a mark of Myanmar’s gratitude towards India. But the Vipassana founder in his own style paid a tribute to Myanmar for preserving this Indian technique for over 2,000 year by constructing the golden pagodas in the traditional Myanmar interlocking style.

3 brothers shot by Rohingyas in Teknaf, police say

The Daily Star
Star Digital Report
June 30, 2021

Three locals, brothers, were hospitalised after being shot and critically injured by a group of armed Rohingyas in Teknaf, Cox's Bazar, police said.

The injured are Rahmatullah (30), Salamatullah (22), and Mohammad Hossain (18) -- sons of Habibur Rahman.

The incident happened at Jadimura Rohingya Camp no. 27 near Nature Park area in Hnila union of Teknaf upazila at 3:30am today, reports our correspondent quoting police.

Today's News (Quick Search )June 2021

Rohingya News all over the world

NEWS TODA

30.06.2021


12 Burmese jobs in Ireland - Dublin LinkedIn

3 brothers shot by Rohingyas in Teknaf, police say The Daily Star

3 injured as Rohingya men attack house near camp Dhaka Tribune

Academia's stepchildren, the Jews JNS.org

Among Rohingya Refugees, Skin Issues Are Rife. This Clinic is a First Line of Defense. Direct Relief

Aung San Suu Kyi urges Myanmar to stay 'united' - Business Recorder

Blindfolded and Beaten: American Journalist Recounts 98 Days in Myanmar Jail | Voice of America ... Voice of America

Boat carrying 81 Rohingya found stranded on Indonesia island News Nation USA

Cache of unexploded weapons raises concerns in Rathedaung Twsp Burma News International

First fatality of third-wave reported as Arakan's Covid-19 cases rise to 119 Burma News International

India and Myanmar: A Chequered Relationship Through History Moneylife

IOM emergency director urges durable solutions for Rohingya crisis newagebd.net

KRCS, QRCS sign deal to help Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh Kuwait News Agency

Legal setback for Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar 'sedition' case - Irvine Times

Myanmar aims to buy more Russian, Chinese COVID-19 vaccines as cases rise Reuters

Myanmar authorities to release 700 prisoners from Insein jail -prison chief - Reuters

Myanmar court denies bid by Suu Kyi to disqualify testimony - Lake Geneva Regional News

Myanmar court refuses to disqualify evidence against Suu Kyi, lawyer says Press TV

Myanmar diplomats in US and Switzerland refuse to return home after criticising military junta South China Morning Post

Myanmar Judge Denies Motion to Dismiss Evidence Against Suu Kyi, Lawyer Says - U.S. News & World Report

Myanmar junta gains hold on jade profits as fighting flares The Baytown Sun

Myanmar military warns foreign media to not call it a 'junta' Nikkei Asia

Myanmar to release 2000 prisoners, drops charges against actors Aljazeera.com

Myanmar's military has tightened its grip on the jade industry, report says - News-Daily.com

Myanmar's Suu Kyi warns on COVID-19 as cases spike - Reuters

PEC demands unconditional release of all Myanmar clerk - Illinois News

Pope appeals for aid to Myanmar displaced on World Refugee Day News Nation USA

'Revolution Love' sweeps Myanmar protest barricades FRANCE 24

Rohingya refugees facing medical crisis on Bhasan Char MENAFN.COM

Rohingya refugees in Malaysia living under cloud of uncertainty amid COVID-19 The Chestnut Post

Rohingya refugees in Malaysia struggling to survive amid rising arrests | Video CNA

Teen driver killed in horror Bailup crash PerthNow

The UNGA Resolution on the Situation in Myanmar: Why was the Rohingya Issue Neglected? Modern Diplomacy

UN Security Council Should Impose Myanmar Arms Embargo Human Rights Watch

Vaccinated persons catch Covid-19 in Arakan State Burma News International

Virus's spread affecting banking, police and court system in Arakan State Burma News International 

ROHINGYA LIFELINE

Rohingya Broadcast \ t ရိုဟင္ဂ်ာ“ Lifeline” ေရဒီယို - ၂၀၂၁ ခုႏွစ္၊ ဇူလိုင္လ၊ ၾကာသပေတးေန႔၊  ၂၀၁၀ MC & News: Sami Ahmed & Mohammed ဟူစိန္ \ arsenic \ netexchange $ \ Bangla \ MP3 ROH Lifeline 07012021 1130 UTC Intro Today: ၾကာသပေတးေန႔၊ ဇူလိုင္ ၁၊ ၂၀၂၁ ၇:၃၀ am (Washington, DC, USA)

 

Link : Here

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

နေ့စဉ်ရေဒီယိုသတင်း (အသံဖိုင် ) ဇွန်လ၊ ၂၀၂၁

အသံဖိုင်များကို " သတင်းနားဆင်ရန်လင့် " တွင်ကလစ်လုပ်၍ နားဆင် နိုင်ပါသည်။
အောက်ဖေါ်ပြပါ ကော်လံများရှိ အသံဖိုင်များကို သတင်းနားဆင်ရန် လင့်တွင် ကလစ်လုပ်၍ နားဆင်နိုင်ပါသည်။

ရက်စွဲ့
သတင်းဌာန
နံနက်ပိုင်းအစီအစဉ်
ညနေပိုင်းအစီအစဉ်
30.06.2021
VOA
VOA
VOA
30.06.2021
BBC
BBC
BBC
30.06.2021
RFA
RFA
RFA

The junta overthrew the government they represented. What happens next for Myanmar's diplomats in limbo?

CNN
Caitlin Hu, Julia Hollingsworth, Eliza Mackintosh and Helen Regan,
June 29, 2021



New York (CNN)In a beige stone townhouse on a leafy New York street, a political coup thousands of miles away has split an office in two.

Downstairs in the dimly lit building, staffers at Myanmar's Permanent Mission to the United Nations receive orders from the military junta, which overthrew the country's elected government on February 1.

Upstairs, charismatic ambassador Kyaw Moe Tun is leading what is effectively an underground diplomatic corps, part of an attempt to wrestle back control of the country. His conference room is decorated with portraits of a long line of his military-aligned predecessors, reminders of what he's up against.

No Country To Call Home

eurasiareview
East-West Center
Displaced Rohingya in Myanmar. Photo Credit: Tasnim News Agency

Across Southeast Asia, millions of people are stateless, either by circumstance or design. Some of those lacking legal national identity are refugees or migrants, but most are minorities in the countries of their birth, many living without adequate access to critical services like health care and education.

Some progress is being made, however. A recent East-West Center analysis examining the status of these populations found that several governments and civil organizations have taken steps in the past decade to address the complex causes of statelessness. “Since the forced mass exodus of Rohingya from Myanmar, many have reached the shores of Malaysia and Indonesia, driving home the implications of unresolved situations of statelessness,” writes researcher Christoph Sperfeldt in Legal Identity and Statelessness in Southeast Asia, part of EWC’s AsiaPacific Issues series of analysis papers. “Policy responses of states in the region have focused on identifying affected persons, improving civil registration, law reforms, facilitating naturalization, and building new digital identification systems.”

Myanmar jade industry becoming 'slush fund' for junta

THE STRAITS TIMES
Maria Siow
Published:  29 Jun, 2021
Myanmar is one of the world's biggest sources of jadeite and the industry is largely driven by insatiable demand for jade from neighbouring China.PHOTO: REUTERS

YANGON (AFP) - Myanmar's multibillion-dollar jade mines risk becoming a "slush fund" for military repression, international watchdog Global Witness said on Tuesday (June 29), urging consumers to boycott buying any jade and gemstones from the coup-racked nation.

The country has been in turmoil since the military toppled the government of elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, with more than 880 people killed in a junta crackdown on dissent, according to a local monitoring group.

ICC Partners with Free Burma Rangers to Provide Aid and Hope to 1,500 IDPs

PERSECUTION
International Christian Concern
6/28/2021


Myanmar (International Christian Concern) – Since the February 1 military coup that deposed Aung San Suu Kyi’s democratically elected civilian government, infighting between the Burmese military and pro-democracy groups has reached a boiling point. The fighting has forced many Burmese people to flee their villages out of fear for their lives, leading to a significant spike in the number of internally displaced people (IDPs) in the country.

Burma is in a flux

The Manila Times
Akash Sahu
June 29, 2021
COMMENTARY )

ART has a unique ability to transport the mind to the past, making it easier to draw inferences on current realities. The 1949 song 'Mere piya gye Rangoon' features popular Indian singer Shamshad Begum as a woman bewailing her husband, who has gone to Burma for better opportunities. It paints an early 20th century picture when hundreds of Indians flocked to the Burmese capital of Rangoon laden with economic potential. Europeans, Indians, Burmese and Chinese, sometimes with mixed ethnicities and plural religious faiths, thrived in the fast-growing city of Rangoon in a prospering Burma.

Civilian Militias Flourish as Myanmar’s Post-Coup Turmoil Deepens

THE I DIPLOMAT

Sebastian Strangio
June 28, 2021

Recent months have seen the emergence of a raft of new armed civilian militias, further complicating the country’s political crisis.

Myanmar’s political crisis is entering a new and more complex phase as a raft of new armed militias arise to resist the country’s military junta, according to the latest report from the International Crisis Group (ICG). Since the military’s seizure of power on February 1, the junta’s crackdown on protesters and the broader civilian population has prompted violent resistance, including the formation of civilian militias in several corners of the country.

“The swift emergence of militias, and their capacity to evolve from loosely coordinated groups of local people into more structured, better armed, and sustainably funded forces, likely marks a new phase of Myanmar’s decades-old civil war,” states the ICG report, which was released yesterday.
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