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FRONTIER MYANMAR
Buddhist monks in Myanmar split on anti-junta movement. Myanmar's Buddhist monkhood led an earlier struggle against military rule but is split on the February 1 coup that ended the country's nascent democracy, with some prominent religious leaders defending the newjunta. BY
FRONTIER MYANMAR STATEMENT ON THE DETENTION OF DANNY One week ago, on May 24, Frontier Myanmar’s managing editor Danny Fenster, a 37-year-old American citizen, was detained at Yangon International Airport shortly before boarding a flight to Kuala Lumpur. We understand that he is now in Insein Prison in Yangon. Despite multiple attempts, Frontier hasINSIDE INSEIN
THE INVENTORS
The inventors. As it struggles to modernise, Myanmar is finding a host of technology problems. It needs its community of amateur hackers to solve them. Students practice creating objects using a 3D printer at Phandeeyar, an ICT hub located in downtown Yangon. (Ann Wang /Frontier)
ANTI-COUP MILITIA SAYS AT LEAST FIVE DEAD IN MINDAT By AFP. At least five fighters in an anti-junta militia have been killed after days of clashes in the Chin town of Mindat, the militia said on Sunday, as Britain and the United States condemned the military’s violence against civilians. The country has been in uproar since the military ousted the civilian government in a February1 coup
MYANMAR COUNTS COST OF COUP, 100 DAYS ON By AFP. One hundred days after the military seized power, the Christian nun who pleaded for protesters on her knees on the streets of Myitkyina says the coup has cast a pall of fear and depression over the country. The image of Sister Ann Rose Nu Tawng kneeling in the dust, arms spread, begging police in the Kachin State capital not toshoot
FOREIGN FIRMS FACE TOUGH CHOICES OVER MYANMAR UNREST Foreign firms in Myanmar face some tough choices over how to respond to the military coup and subsequent violent crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in the country. More than 520 people have died in daily demonstrations since the military overthrew elected leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, halting Myanmar’s decade-old experimentin
A WIN-WIN PROJECT FOR IRRAWADDY DOLPHINS The project, says Thant Zin, has tried to turn a challenge into a win-win situation, by providing an unforgettable experience for tourists, helping to preserve local culture and beneficial traditions such as cooperative fishing, generating extra revenue for local communities, and contributing to efforts to protect the Irrawaddydolphin.
UNEARTHING THE TRUTH BEHIND A COLONIAL MURDER IN MAYMYO EARLY ON the morning of May 17, 1931 in Maymyo, a riderless pony trotted into the compound of Mr Syed Ali – owner of the Maymyo Electric Supply Company – its saddle covered in blood. Maymyo, now Pyin Oo Lwin, on the western edge of the Shan plateau, was the main British hill station in colonial Burma, its manicured lawns and prim,hedge
THE CONDOM STIGMA
Recent health surveys suggest there may still be a long way to go. The Myanmar Family Planning Landscape Analysis, published by the ministry last year, found that condoms made up just 3 percent of the private sector contraceptive market. According to the 2015-16 Myanmar Demographic and Health Survey, 51 percent of married women aged 15 to49
FRONTIER MYANMAR
Buddhist monks in Myanmar split on anti-junta movement. Myanmar's Buddhist monkhood led an earlier struggle against military rule but is split on the February 1 coup that ended the country's nascent democracy, with some prominent religious leaders defending the newjunta. BY
FRONTIER MYANMAR STATEMENT ON THE DETENTION OF DANNY One week ago, on May 24, Frontier Myanmar’s managing editor Danny Fenster, a 37-year-old American citizen, was detained at Yangon International Airport shortly before boarding a flight to Kuala Lumpur. We understand that he is now in Insein Prison in Yangon. Despite multiple attempts, Frontier hasINSIDE INSEIN
THE INVENTORS
The inventors. As it struggles to modernise, Myanmar is finding a host of technology problems. It needs its community of amateur hackers to solve them. Students practice creating objects using a 3D printer at Phandeeyar, an ICT hub located in downtown Yangon. (Ann Wang /Frontier)
ANTI-COUP MILITIA SAYS AT LEAST FIVE DEAD IN MINDAT By AFP. At least five fighters in an anti-junta militia have been killed after days of clashes in the Chin town of Mindat, the militia said on Sunday, as Britain and the United States condemned the military’s violence against civilians. The country has been in uproar since the military ousted the civilian government in a February1 coup
MYANMAR COUNTS COST OF COUP, 100 DAYS ON By AFP. One hundred days after the military seized power, the Christian nun who pleaded for protesters on her knees on the streets of Myitkyina says the coup has cast a pall of fear and depression over the country. The image of Sister Ann Rose Nu Tawng kneeling in the dust, arms spread, begging police in the Kachin State capital not toshoot
FOREIGN FIRMS FACE TOUGH CHOICES OVER MYANMAR UNREST Foreign firms in Myanmar face some tough choices over how to respond to the military coup and subsequent violent crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in the country. More than 520 people have died in daily demonstrations since the military overthrew elected leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, halting Myanmar’s decade-old experimentin
A WIN-WIN PROJECT FOR IRRAWADDY DOLPHINS The project, says Thant Zin, has tried to turn a challenge into a win-win situation, by providing an unforgettable experience for tourists, helping to preserve local culture and beneficial traditions such as cooperative fishing, generating extra revenue for local communities, and contributing to efforts to protect the Irrawaddydolphin.
UNEARTHING THE TRUTH BEHIND A COLONIAL MURDER IN MAYMYO EARLY ON the morning of May 17, 1931 in Maymyo, a riderless pony trotted into the compound of Mr Syed Ali – owner of the Maymyo Electric Supply Company – its saddle covered in blood. Maymyo, now Pyin Oo Lwin, on the western edge of the Shan plateau, was the main British hill station in colonial Burma, its manicured lawns and prim,hedge
THE CONDOM STIGMA
Recent health surveys suggest there may still be a long way to go. The Myanmar Family Planning Landscape Analysis, published by the ministry last year, found that condoms made up just 3 percent of the private sector contraceptive market. According to the 2015-16 Myanmar Demographic and Health Survey, 51 percent of married women aged 15 to49
FILM FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS MYANMAR'S LONG STRUGGLE FOR 1 day ago · Online film festival that runs to June 20 aims to draw attention to Myanmar’s political crisis while raising money for groups inside the country striving to restore democracy and alleviate hardship. Mr Kenneth Wong and his family left Myanmar soon after witnessing the military gun down unarmed ‘OUR REVOLUTION IS STARTING’: URBAN GUERRILLAS PREPARE TO Small, independent groups are waging guerrilla warfare on the streets in an effort to undermine the military regime but the rising violence has some Yangon residents worried for their safety. In the immediate aftermath of the February 1 coup, Ko Min Wai was a JUNTA PLAN TO REPLACE STRIKING STAFF WILL WRECK EDUCATION Teachers in the Civil Disobedience Movement believe the recruitment of daily wage earners to teach in re-opened government schools will result in “fake education”. Daw Sandar Moe is one of more than 139,000 teachers who have been sacked for participating in the Civil Disobedience Movement JUNTA RESPONSIBLE FOR ‘HUMAN RIGHTS CATASTROPHE', SAYS UN 1 day ago · The UN rights chief said on Friday that Myanmar had plunged into a “human rights catastrophe” since the February 1 coup, with violence escalating across the country. Pointing to reported military build-up in several regions of the country, United Nations High Commissioner for MYANMAR’S MILITARY ‘JUSTICE’ SYSTEM Military courts operate under the provisions of the 1959 Defence Services Act and the accompanying courts martial procedures. The law exempts servicemen from civilian courts in most cases, even when the alleged victims are civilians. TWELVE KILLED IN TATMADAW PLANE CRASH IN PYI OO LWIN Twelve people were killed when a Myanmar military plane carrying a senior monk and several donors to a religious event crashed in Mandalay Region, a junta spokesman said on Thursday. The plane, which was carrying six crew and eight passengers, crashed shortly before it ESCAPE FROM MYANMAR: HOW REPORTER MRATT KYAW THU FLED TO While boarding the plane that would fly him to Europe, Ko Mratt Kyaw Thu felt safe for the first time since Myanmar’s military coup on February 1. It had been an arduous few months for the journalist who quickly found himself on the military junta’s wanted list for his reporting of its deadly CLIMATE CHANGE AND DEEP ADAPTATION IN MYANMAR Work on climate change adaptation in Myanmar and elsewhere has so far been mostly piecemeal, especially in relation to future modes of political governance. There is a reluctance to challenge globally and locally dominant political and economic models. However, the continued growth of late capitalist economies under current conditions is not HOW WE LIVE NOW: A SURVEY OF LIVING STANDARDS IN MYANMAR A survey of living standards in Myanmar has revealed that the national quality of life is improving, but there are glaring inequalities in ethnic minority and rural areas. GOVERNMENTS NEED data on how people live to make good policy decisions but for decades Myanmar didn’t collect such information. For this reason, the 2014 census, while AUNG SAN SUU KYI TO GO ON TRIAL NEXT WEEK By AFP. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi will go on trial next week, her lawyer said on Monday, with the ousted leader facing an eclectic raft of charges, from possessing unlicensed walkie-talkies to flouting coronavirus restrictions during the election last year.FRONTIER MYANMAR
Buddhist monks in Myanmar split on anti-junta movement. Myanmar's Buddhist monkhood led an earlier struggle against military rule but is split on the February 1 coup that ended the country's nascent democracy, with some prominent religious leaders defending the newjunta. BY
FRONTIER MYANMAR STATEMENT ON THE DETENTION OF DANNY Frontier Myanmar statement on the detention of Danny Fenster. May 31, 2021. By FRONTIER. One week ago, on May 24, Frontier Myanmar’s managing editor Danny Fenster, a 37-year-old American citizen, was detained at Yangon International Airport shortly before boarding a flight to Kuala Lumpur. We understand that he is now in Insein Prisonin Yangon.
INSIDE INSEIN
ANTI-COUP MILITIA SAYS AT LEAST FIVE DEAD IN MINDAT By AFP. At least five fighters in an anti-junta militia have been killed after days of clashes in the Chin town of Mindat, the militia said on Sunday, as Britain and the United States condemned the military’s violence against civilians. The country has been in uproar since the military ousted the civilian government in a February1 coup
THE INVENTORS
The inventors. As it struggles to modernise, Myanmar is finding a host of technology problems. It needs its community of amateur hackers to solve them. Students practice creating objects using a 3D printer at Phandeeyar, an ICT hub located in downtown Yangon. (Ann Wang /Frontier)
MYANMAR COUNTS COST OF COUP, 100 DAYS ON By AFP. One hundred days after the military seized power, the Christian nun who pleaded for protesters on her knees on the streets of Myitkyina says the coup has cast a pall of fear and depression over the country. The image of Sister Ann Rose Nu Tawng kneeling in the dust, arms spread, begging police in the Kachin State capital not toshoot
FOREIGN FIRMS FACE TOUGH CHOICES OVER MYANMAR UNREST Foreign firms in Myanmar face some tough choices over how to respond to the military coup and subsequent violent crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in the country. More than 520 people have died in daily demonstrations since the military overthrew elected leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, halting Myanmar’s decade-old experimentin
FIREARMS AND THE LAW IN MYANMAR Generally speaking, Myanmar citizens have the right to own firearms but licences since the 1960s have only been issued to a privileged few. The first such law, the Indian Arms Act, was enacted in 1878 when Burma was under British colonial rule. It applied throughout the country but subsequent changes, in 1924 and 1948, provided forexceptions
UNEARTHING THE TRUTH BEHIND A COLONIAL MURDER IN MAYMYO EARLY ON the morning of May 17, 1931 in Maymyo, a riderless pony trotted into the compound of Mr Syed Ali – owner of the Maymyo Electric Supply Company – its saddle covered in blood. Maymyo, now Pyin Oo Lwin, on the western edge of the Shan plateau, was the main British hill station in colonial Burma, its manicured lawns and prim,hedge
A WIN-WIN PROJECT FOR IRRAWADDY DOLPHINS The project, says Thant Zin, has tried to turn a challenge into a win-win situation, by providing an unforgettable experience for tourists, helping to preserve local culture and beneficial traditions such as cooperative fishing, generating extra revenue for local communities, and contributing to efforts to protect the Irrawaddydolphin.
FRONTIER MYANMAR
Buddhist monks in Myanmar split on anti-junta movement. Myanmar's Buddhist monkhood led an earlier struggle against military rule but is split on the February 1 coup that ended the country's nascent democracy, with some prominent religious leaders defending the newjunta. BY
FRONTIER MYANMAR STATEMENT ON THE DETENTION OF DANNY Frontier Myanmar statement on the detention of Danny Fenster. May 31, 2021. By FRONTIER. One week ago, on May 24, Frontier Myanmar’s managing editor Danny Fenster, a 37-year-old American citizen, was detained at Yangon International Airport shortly before boarding a flight to Kuala Lumpur. We understand that he is now in Insein Prisonin Yangon.
INSIDE INSEIN
ANTI-COUP MILITIA SAYS AT LEAST FIVE DEAD IN MINDAT By AFP. At least five fighters in an anti-junta militia have been killed after days of clashes in the Chin town of Mindat, the militia said on Sunday, as Britain and the United States condemned the military’s violence against civilians. The country has been in uproar since the military ousted the civilian government in a February1 coup
THE INVENTORS
The inventors. As it struggles to modernise, Myanmar is finding a host of technology problems. It needs its community of amateur hackers to solve them. Students practice creating objects using a 3D printer at Phandeeyar, an ICT hub located in downtown Yangon. (Ann Wang /Frontier)
MYANMAR COUNTS COST OF COUP, 100 DAYS ON By AFP. One hundred days after the military seized power, the Christian nun who pleaded for protesters on her knees on the streets of Myitkyina says the coup has cast a pall of fear and depression over the country. The image of Sister Ann Rose Nu Tawng kneeling in the dust, arms spread, begging police in the Kachin State capital not toshoot
FOREIGN FIRMS FACE TOUGH CHOICES OVER MYANMAR UNREST Foreign firms in Myanmar face some tough choices over how to respond to the military coup and subsequent violent crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in the country. More than 520 people have died in daily demonstrations since the military overthrew elected leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, halting Myanmar’s decade-old experimentin
FIREARMS AND THE LAW IN MYANMAR Generally speaking, Myanmar citizens have the right to own firearms but licences since the 1960s have only been issued to a privileged few. The first such law, the Indian Arms Act, was enacted in 1878 when Burma was under British colonial rule. It applied throughout the country but subsequent changes, in 1924 and 1948, provided forexceptions
UNEARTHING THE TRUTH BEHIND A COLONIAL MURDER IN MAYMYO EARLY ON the morning of May 17, 1931 in Maymyo, a riderless pony trotted into the compound of Mr Syed Ali – owner of the Maymyo Electric Supply Company – its saddle covered in blood. Maymyo, now Pyin Oo Lwin, on the western edge of the Shan plateau, was the main British hill station in colonial Burma, its manicured lawns and prim,hedge
A WIN-WIN PROJECT FOR IRRAWADDY DOLPHINS The project, says Thant Zin, has tried to turn a challenge into a win-win situation, by providing an unforgettable experience for tourists, helping to preserve local culture and beneficial traditions such as cooperative fishing, generating extra revenue for local communities, and contributing to efforts to protect the Irrawaddydolphin.
‘OUR REVOLUTION IS STARTING’: URBAN GUERRILLAS PREPARE TO 12 hours ago · Small, independent groups are waging guerrilla warfare on the streets in an effort to undermine the military regime but the rising violence has some Yangon residents worried for their safety. In the immediate aftermath of the February 1 coup, Ko Min Waiwas a
JUNTA PLAN TO REPLACE STRIKING STAFF WILL WRECK EDUCATION 1 day ago · Teachers in the Civil Disobedience Movement believe the recruitment of daily wage earners to teach in re-opened government schools will result in “fake education”. Daw Sandar Moe is one of more than 139,000 teachers who have been sacked for participating in the Civil Disobedience Movement TIANANMEN AND THE TATMADAW: KILLING THEIR OWN PEOPLE When the killing of defiant protesters began in Myanmar earlier this year, it prompted an evacuee from Beijing after Tiananmen to recall a sign in a Hong Kong jewellery shop 32 years ago. After the Tatmadaw began using lethal force against citizens outraged at its CONTACT US | FRONTIER MYANMAR Contact Us. Print subscriptions: To subscribe to Frontier Myanmar , click here. For enquiries relating to subscriptions and distribution, contact Nang Maisy Kyaw at nang@frontiermyanmar.net or call +95 945 0064 745. Letters to the editor, op-eds and freelance submissions: Please send all submissions to editorial@frontiermyanmar.net. ESCAPE FROM MYANMAR: HOW REPORTER MRATT KYAW THU FLED TO 8 hours ago · It was only when he boarded the plane that would fly him to Europe that Ko Mratt Kyaw Thu finally felt safe for the first time since Myanmar’s military coup on February 1. It had been an arduous few months for the journalist who quickly found himself on the military junta’s wanted list for his MYANMAR'S POST-COUP CASH CRUNCH CREATES A SHADOW MONEY Mobile money agents and informal brokers have been meeting the demand for cash at a time when banks are severely limiting withdrawals, but some accuse them of profiteering by charging steep fees. When U San Lwin arrived at his local KBZ bank in Yangon’s Latha Township at MYANMAR’S MILITARY ‘JUSTICE’ SYSTEM Military courts operate under the provisions of the 1959 Defence Services Act and the accompanying courts martial procedures. The law exempts servicemen from civilian courts in most cases, even when the alleged victims are civilians. AUNG SAN SUU KYI TO GO ON TRIAL NEXT WEEK By AFP. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi will go on trial next week, her lawyer said on Monday, with the ousted leader facing an eclectic raft of charges, from possessing unlicensed walkie-talkies to flouting coronavirus restrictions during the election last year. FIREARMS AND THE LAW IN MYANMAR Generally speaking, Myanmar citizens have the right to own firearms but licences since the 1960s have only been issued to a privileged few. The first such law, the Indian Arms Act, was enacted in 1878 when Burma was under British colonial rule. It applied throughout the country but subsequent changes, in 1924 and 1948, provided forexceptions
CLIMATE CHANGE AND DEEP ADAPTATION IN MYANMAR Work on climate change adaptation in Myanmar and elsewhere has so far been mostly piecemeal, especially in relation to future modes of political governance. There is a reluctance to challenge globally and locally dominant political and economic models. However, the continued growth of late capitalist economies under current conditions is notFRONTIER MYANMAR
Buddhist monks in Myanmar split on anti-junta movement. Myanmar's Buddhist monkhood led an earlier struggle against military rule but is split on the February 1 coup that ended the country's nascent democracy, with some prominent religious leaders defending the newjunta. BY
CONTACT US | FRONTIER MYANMAR Contact Us. Print subscriptions: To subscribe to Frontier Myanmar , click here. For enquiries relating to subscriptions and distribution, contact Nang Maisy Kyaw at nang@frontiermyanmar.net or call +95 945 0064 745. Letters to the editor, op-eds and freelance submissions: Please send all submissions to editorial@frontiermyanmar.net.INSIDE INSEIN
THE INVENTORS
The inventors. As it struggles to modernise, Myanmar is finding a host of technology problems. It needs its community of amateur hackers to solve them. Students practice creating objects using a 3D printer at Phandeeyar, an ICT hub located in downtown Yangon. (Ann Wang /Frontier)
NO COUNTRY FOR YOUNG WOMEN? MYANMAR'S BATTLE AGAINST RAPE No country for young women? Myanmar's battle against rape. March 2, 2020. By AFP. YANGON — Officially, rape hardly happens in Myanmar and domestic abuse is non-existent. The reality? Violence against women is so pervasive it is regarded as normal, and as a result woefully underreported, says lawyer and activist Daw Hla Hla Yee.“Domestic
THE KOKANG CASINO DREAM Dreams and reality. The Kokang leaders’ dream of a gambling mecca face some challenges. The first is building peace. Although the Tatmadaw regained control of Laukkai in the wake of the February 2015 offensive, the nighttime curfew remains in A WIN-WIN PROJECT FOR IRRAWADDY DOLPHINS The project, says Thant Zin, has tried to turn a challenge into a win-win situation, by providing an unforgettable experience for tourists, helping to preserve local culture and beneficial traditions such as cooperative fishing, generating extra revenue for local communities, and contributing to efforts to protect the Irrawaddydolphin.
TATMADAW RAISES PROSPECT OF COUP AFTER VOTER-FRAUD CLAIMS The military on Tuesday ramped up demands for an investigation into alleged voter fraud, then refused to rule out ‘taking power’. By AFP. Myanmar’s powerful military on Tuesday raised the spectre of staging a coup as it ramped up demands for an investigation into alleged voter fraud during last year’s election, swept by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s ruling party. MYO KHIN, IN LIVING COLOUR Prize-winning Mandalay painter Myo Khin can turn out more than 300 abstracts a year but his career was going nowhere until he made the change from watercolours to acrylic. U PHYO MIN THEIN BUILDS A BUSINESS EMPIRE First proposed under former chief minister U Myint Swe, the project is likely to cost several billion dollars to implement. Phyo Min Thein has said he will proceed through a JV company formed by the Yangon Region government and private construction firms. At a meeting with business leaders on March 7, Phyo Min Thein also unveiled plans toFRONTIER MYANMAR
Buddhist monks in Myanmar split on anti-junta movement. Myanmar's Buddhist monkhood led an earlier struggle against military rule but is split on the February 1 coup that ended the country's nascent democracy, with some prominent religious leaders defending the newjunta. BY
CONTACT US | FRONTIER MYANMAR Contact Us. Print subscriptions: To subscribe to Frontier Myanmar , click here. For enquiries relating to subscriptions and distribution, contact Nang Maisy Kyaw at nang@frontiermyanmar.net or call +95 945 0064 745. Letters to the editor, op-eds and freelance submissions: Please send all submissions to editorial@frontiermyanmar.net.INSIDE INSEIN
THE INVENTORS
The inventors. As it struggles to modernise, Myanmar is finding a host of technology problems. It needs its community of amateur hackers to solve them. Students practice creating objects using a 3D printer at Phandeeyar, an ICT hub located in downtown Yangon. (Ann Wang /Frontier)
NO COUNTRY FOR YOUNG WOMEN? MYANMAR'S BATTLE AGAINST RAPE No country for young women? Myanmar's battle against rape. March 2, 2020. By AFP. YANGON — Officially, rape hardly happens in Myanmar and domestic abuse is non-existent. The reality? Violence against women is so pervasive it is regarded as normal, and as a result woefully underreported, says lawyer and activist Daw Hla Hla Yee.“Domestic
THE KOKANG CASINO DREAM Dreams and reality. The Kokang leaders’ dream of a gambling mecca face some challenges. The first is building peace. Although the Tatmadaw regained control of Laukkai in the wake of the February 2015 offensive, the nighttime curfew remains in A WIN-WIN PROJECT FOR IRRAWADDY DOLPHINS The project, says Thant Zin, has tried to turn a challenge into a win-win situation, by providing an unforgettable experience for tourists, helping to preserve local culture and beneficial traditions such as cooperative fishing, generating extra revenue for local communities, and contributing to efforts to protect the Irrawaddydolphin.
TATMADAW RAISES PROSPECT OF COUP AFTER VOTER-FRAUD CLAIMS The military on Tuesday ramped up demands for an investigation into alleged voter fraud, then refused to rule out ‘taking power’. By AFP. Myanmar’s powerful military on Tuesday raised the spectre of staging a coup as it ramped up demands for an investigation into alleged voter fraud during last year’s election, swept by Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s ruling party. MYO KHIN, IN LIVING COLOUR Prize-winning Mandalay painter Myo Khin can turn out more than 300 abstracts a year but his career was going nowhere until he made the change from watercolours to acrylic. U PHYO MIN THEIN BUILDS A BUSINESS EMPIRE First proposed under former chief minister U Myint Swe, the project is likely to cost several billion dollars to implement. Phyo Min Thein has said he will proceed through a JV company formed by the Yangon Region government and private construction firms. At a meeting with business leaders on March 7, Phyo Min Thein also unveiled plans to JUNTA PLAN TO REPLACE STRIKING STAFF WILL WRECK EDUCATION 20 hours ago · Teachers in the Civil Disobedience Movement believe the recruitment of daily wage earners to teach in re-opened government schools will result in “fake education”. Daw Sandar Moe is one of more than 139,000 teachers who have been sackedWELCOME TO WA STATE
Panghsang has well-made concrete roads and they were busy with traffic police when Frontier arrived on April 15, ahead of celebrations marking the 30th anniversary of the UWSP’s ceasefire agreement with Myanmar’s military junta on May 9, 1989. The pact was agreed within weeks of the UWSP being formed by Wa troops that mutinied against their commanders in the Communist Party of Burma. MYANMAR'S POST-COUP CASH CRUNCH CREATES A SHADOW MONEY Mobile money agents and informal brokers have been meeting the demand for cash at a time when banks are severely limiting withdrawals, but some accuse them of profiteering by charging steep fees. When U San Lwin arrived at his local KBZ bank in Yangon’s Latha Township at TIANANMEN AND THE TATMADAW: KILLING THEIR OWN PEOPLE When the killing of defiant protesters began in Myanmar earlier this year, it prompted an evacuee from Beijing after Tiananmen to recall a sign in a Hong Kong jewellery shop 32 years ago. After the Tatmadaw began using lethal force against citizens outraged at its FRONTIER MYANMAR STATEMENT ON THE DETENTION OF DANNY Frontier Myanmar statement on the detention of Danny Fenster. May 31, 2021. By FRONTIER. One week ago, on May 24, Frontier Myanmar’s managing editor Danny Fenster, a 37-year-old American citizen, was detained at Yangon International Airport shortly before boarding a flight to Kuala Lumpur. We understand that he is now in Insein Prisonin Yangon.
POETS SQUARE OFF AGAINST JUNTA'S WAR ON WORDS Before he was killed, Khet Thi’s poems railed eloquently against Myanmar’s sudden coup, joining a deluge of protest verse celebrating democracy demonstrators and defying the military’s brutal war on words. As soldiers unleashed a violent crackdown on resistance to thearmy takeover, he
‘I JUST WANT TO CRY’: NON-STRIKING CIVIL SERVANTS IN A Many who continue to work under the junta oppose the coup but are kept in their jobs by fear, family obligations and a belief they can do more good within the system than out on strike. Daw May Thu is not proud to serve under the military regime. Quite the opposite: she despises it and fervently CITY-BORN PROTESTERS PREPARE FOR WAR IN THE EASTERN Nervous laughter breaks out in the jungle as a young man training to overthrow the junta is knocked backwards by the kick of a rifle he has just fired at a target painted on a tree. Waiting behind him for their turn with the weapon are others who have fled the cities and reappeared in ethnic armed AUNG SAN SUU KYI TO GO ON TRIAL NEXT WEEK 1 day ago · By AFP. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi will go on trial next week, her lawyer said on Monday, with the ousted leader facing an eclectic raft of charges, from possessing unlicensed walkie-talkies to flouting coronavirus restrictions during the election last year. DVB JOURNALISTS IN THAILAND FINED, FACE POSSIBLE Three Myanmar journalists who illegally crossed into Thailand to flee a military crackdown have been fined and could face deportation, a member of their legal team said on Tuesday, warning the trio’s lives will be in danger if they are sent home. The journalists, who worked for Democratic Voice of Skip to main content Support Frontier's independent journalism. Sign up to be a member.* En
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Activists championed by rights groups have history of anti-Rohingyamessaging
24 May 2020
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Despite ominous predictions, there are few signs of a disastrous spread of COVID-19, while the capacity to control and treat the disease is increasing with each day.Previous Pause Next
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Min Aung Hlaing reshuffles senior military ranks ahead of election19 May 2020
'Off-the-charts' Myanmar drug busts reveal fentanyl first19 May 2020
Tanintharyi Region a new hotspot for crystal meth trafficking16 May 2020
Myanmar army admits prisoner abuse after beating video emerges13 May 2020
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Fever clinics: the first line of defence against COVID-19 Fever clinics are being set up around the country to check...20 May 2020
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More migrants prepare to return, but is Myanmar ready this time? Tens of thousands of migrant workers in Thailand are...17 May 2020
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In Magway Region, virus response inflicts misery on the grassroots In one of Myanmar’s poorest regions, jobs are drying up,...15 May 2020
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Limited relief for microfinance borrowers as the clock ticks on debtpayments
Myanmar’s five million microfinance borrowers will resume...13 May 2020
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IDPs being left behind in the response to COVID-19, say relief workers Crowded conditions, meagre services, and restrictions on...11 May 2020
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COVID-19’s music men Five men admitted to a Yangon hospital with COVID-19 made...08 May 2020
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Keep on trucking: transport sector remains on the move despiteCOVID-19
Business is down and a reduced fleet of trucks is supplying...05 May 2020
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Patients, medical workers battle discrimination as well as disease While COVID-19 patients are being called criminals,...04 May 2020
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Wild waters: Ye, Mon State The latest instalment in our series about wild swimming...28 Apr 2020
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After WHO driver's death, fear and foreboding haunt Rakhine’sCOVID-19 response
As civilian casualties mount in the conflict between the...27 Apr 2020
OPINION
In Tanintharyi, an indigenous alternative to Big ConservationJack Jenkins Hill
Reasons for optimism in Myanmar’s coronavirus fightSithu Aung Myint
Communities shoulder the burden of environmental justiceBen Hardman
Slow grid rollout shows why Myanmar should join the personal energyrevolution
David Fullbrook
CULTURE AND LIFESTYLE Wild waters: Ye, Mon State28 Apr 2020
The latest instalment in our series about wild swimming spots focuses on little-visited Ye in southern Mon State, where we discover shipwrecks, deserted beaches and technicolour sunsets. Brotherhood of the wheel20 Apr 2020
In fairgrounds across Myanmar, Ferris wheels are... Lots not sold: Myanmar’s developing art auction scene24 Mar 2020
From bargain hunters to forgery threats, the emerging...LATEST ISSUES
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COVID-19’s music men Podcast: Anger over quarantine facilities in Mon State Keep on trucking: transport sector remains on the move despiteCOVID-19
Slow grid rollout shows why Myanmar should join the personal energyrevolution
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