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The 15-year-old reporter deleted the data from her phone and packed up her guitar as she set out to meet a guerrilla fighter in Myanmar. The instrument was mostly a decoy, there to disguise her work as a journalist. She cleared the data from her phone to protect her sources in the event of an arrest.
The Southeast Asian nation has seen a relentless crackdown on free expression, with a small literary magazine emerging as one of the few remaining independent media outlets.
Myanmar's junta chief on Friday called for face-to-face peace talks with the country's established ethnic rebel groups, as the military struggles to crush newer anti-junta militias that have sprung up to fight the coup.
Ministry of Defence-NUG announced that they have been setting up Central Commission on Investigating Military Crimes to investigate the cases which arise in the People’s Defensive War, bring justice for victims and establish legal enforcement.
Ministry of Defence-NUG announced that they have been setting up Central Commission on Investigating Military Crimes to investigate the cases which arise in the People’s Defensive War, bring justice for victims and establish legal enforcement.
Yangon University professor sentenced to three-year in prison elevenmyanmar.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from elevenmyanmar.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Students released from prison, some report being tortured universityworldnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from universityworldnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Military re-opens universities but few students attend But only a handful of students attended, according to witnesses and student union sources across the country. The state-run newspaper Global New Light of Myanmar said the education ministry re-opened 134 universities on 6 May, following COVID-19 health rules, and described students as ‘satisfied’ that universities had resumed so that they could grasp the opportunity for learning and jobs. Teachers arrived on campuses on 3 May to prepare for teaching, it said. A mathematics lecturer at Mawlamyine University who withdrew from the civil disobedience movement (CDM) to protect her family told University World News that some students attended class but she thought more students might come in the weeks ahead.
Myanmar protesters are becoming increasingly creative Credit: Sai Aung Main/AFP Young women marching in bright ball gowns, shirtless bodybuilders flexing their biceps, sartorial posters, and grandmothers banging saucepans; Myanmar’s creative anti-coup protests appear to have a bit of everything. But one thing they don’t have is a defined leadership. Friday saw the Southeast Asian nation’s largest protests yet, as an estimated 100,000 risked state-sponsored violence to gather on the streets of the commercial city of Yangon to demand the military return power to the democratically-elected government of detained civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi. The crowds that gathered on the streets for the 7th straight day in a row were not united under her name or that of her political party, but rather under a loose pro-democracy campaign inspired in part by other organic movements in neighbouring Thailand and Hong Kong.