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Myanmar Regime Returns Public Administration Oversight to Home Affairs Ministry


Myanmar Regime Returns Public Administration Oversight to Home Affairs Ministry
Myanmar Regime Returns Public Administration Oversight to Home Affairs Ministry
Troops patrol near the General Administration Office in Yangon’s Sanchaung Township after an explosion occurred near the office on April 7. / CJ
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By The Irrawaddy 6 May 2021
The Myanmar junta transferred control of the General Administration Department (GAD) the backbone of the country’s public administrative mechanism back to its Home Affairs Ministry on Wednesday.
The transfer of the department comes as the regime pushes to revive the neighborhood surveillance networks utilized by successive military governments.
Under a policy implemented by the GAD, residents of some townships in Yangon Region were recently forced to register overnight guests staying in their homes in a move designed to make it harder for opponents of the regime to evade arrest. ....

National League , Tract Administration Law , Union Government , Administration Department , Home Affairs Ministry , Ministry Of The Office , Home Affairs Ministry On , General Administration Department , Yangon Region , Home Affairs , Village Tract Administration , தேசிய லீக் , தொழிற்சங்கம் அரசு , வீடு வாழ்க்கைத்தொழில்கள் அமைச்சகம் , அமைச்சகம் ஆஃப் தி அலுவலகம் , வீடு வாழ்க்கைத்தொழில்கள் அமைச்சகம் ஆன் , வீடு வாழ்க்கைத்தொழில்கள் ,

Burmese Generals Counter Electoral Defeat with Coup d'État


Burmese Generals Counter Electoral Defeat with Coup d’État
March 9, 2021
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This article is part of the Middle East-Asia Project (MAP) series on “ Civilianizing the State in the Middle East and Asia Pacific Regions.” See More …
In the November 8, 2020 national elections in Myanmar, voters returned 1991 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy (NLD) to power. The party actually improved on its impressive 2015 showing at the polls, gaining well over four-fifths of the seats it ran for allowing it to form a government on its own. (The Burmese Constitution, written in 2008 by the generals, reserves a quarter of the seats in each assembly to the armed forces.) The NLD won 920 (or 82%) of the 1,117 seats it contested, adding a total of 61 seats. The main opposition party, the military-affiliated Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), won only 71 seats, 46 fewer than in 2015.  ....

Aung Hlaing , New York , United States , Ian Holliday , Hannah Beech , Lynette Chua , John Liu , Silke Susann Otto , Roman David , Mathew Davies , Suu Kyi , Myint Swe , Marlise Simons , Min Aung Hlaing , Win Myint , Makiko Takeda , Hlaing Lin , Thompson Chau , Ministry Of The Office , Union Solidarity , Stanford University Press , Union Election Commission , International Court , Cabinet Office , International Republican Institute , Mckinsey Co ,