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Min Ye Kyaw

Min Ye Kyaw

Min Ye Kyaw is an experienced journalist who has extensively covered current affairs, lifestyle and crime in Myanmar. His works have appeared in several publications, including The Times, The Guardian and Myanmar Mix.

The shadow government and UN denounced the military for transferring the ousted leader from house arrest to solitary confinement in prison this week.

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Two veteran pro-democracy activists are among four men whose death penalty sentences have been approved by the junta; executions, which would be the first in decades, are aimed at scaring anyone opposing military rule, say campaigners.

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Myanmar is planning the construction of a pipeline to receive Russian energy exports through India or China following the exit of Malaysia’s Petronas, Thailand’s PTTEP as well as Chevron and TotalEnergies.

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Some 13 months after the military coup, a group of youths are continuing to stage ‘flash mob’ protests in Myanmar’s urban areas that last just a few minutes each.

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Not only would it further antagonise the protesters, the move could also implicate China in the military’s bid to quell the post-coup conflict, an observer says.

Aid agencies lament the ‘out of sight, out of mind’ policy that world powers including the United States and China seem to have adopted following reports of a string of grisly mass killings and other atrocities in Myanmar.

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Independent journalists who remained in the country post-coup have been forced to operate surreptitiously to avoid arbitrary detention, beatings and violent repercussions for their families, according to interviews by This Week in Asia.

The National Unity Government hopes an online lottery and global crowdfunding can raise US$700 million for humanitarian aid and arming the resistance force.

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It’s been more than six months since the coup in Myanmar, yet the Association of Southeast Asian Nations appears to have done little other than appoint Brunei’s Erywan Yusof as a ‘special envoy’.

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‘There is a difference between being armed and not being armed. Everyone is fighting for their lives,’ Alfie wrote on Facebook after receiving military training.

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British-trained Myanmar chef Orng Joitamoi won Restaurant of the Year in Yangon and had big plans until he lost 80 per cent of his clients after the military coup.

Khant Nyar Hein, a medical student from an ethnic Chinese family, was killed by security forces at a protest – and his father is among those who want Beijing to take a stronger stance against the generals behind the February 1 coup.

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Days after a military coup, all seems normal in Yangon during the day, but residents are making their resistance against the military heard come nightfall.

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