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People perform a traditional dance during the opening ceremony of the Thingyan Water Festival in Yangon, Myanmar, 13 April 2024. The annual water festival, known as Thingyan in Myanmar, sees people gathering to celebrate by splashing water and throwing powder at each other as a symbol of cleansing and washing away the sins from the past year. The festival marks the start of the traditional New Year and is similarly celebrated in countries such as Myanmar, Thailand, Laos and Cambodia.
Mizzima Myanmar News
#myanmar#burma#Burmese#thingyan#new year#Cambodia#Thailand#Laos#dance#traditional dance#se asia#southeast asia#water festival
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2024년 1월 9일 미얀마 현지신문 헤드라인
The Mirror (정부기관지) – 1월 8일 국가관리위원회 신임 국가안보고문단 임명, 국가관리위원회 위원장실 1번 실장 Mr. Ko Ko Hlaing, 2번 실장 Mr. Aung Naing Oo, 4번 실장 Moe Aung – 1월 8일 코로나 신규 확진자 48명, 확진율 0.33% – 1월 7일 Development Media Group이 보고한 미얀마 국방부가 라카인주 Sittwe 타운십 민간인 60여명 체포시 무력을 사용했다는 가짜 뉴스 일축 Myawady Daily (국방일보) – 1월 8일 국가관리위원회 위원들, 2023-24년 미얀마 유도대회 참석 – 1월 1일부터 10일까지 타닌따리지역 다웨이 타운십 종합병원에서 무료 안과 수술 441명 시행 – 1월 7일 Mizzima…
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Myanmar junta leader orders Bagan temples repaired after cyclone damage
via Mizzima, 21 May 2023: Junta leader Min Aung Hlaing ordered the renovation of Bagan temples damaged by Cyclone Mocha, emphasizing the use of traditional methods and materials, while also calling for research on a glue formula to be used.
via Mizzima, 21 May 2023: Junta leader Min Aung Hlaing ordered the renovation of Bagan temples damaged by Cyclone Mocha, emphasizing the use of traditional methods and materials, while also calling for research on a glue formula to be used for renovating all ancient stupas and temples, amid criticism that the area was unprepared for the storm. Junta leader Min Aung Hlaing ordered the renovation…
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" Not Ur Typical
Myanmar Girls "
Featuring : Ja Mone from Mizzima News
She's representing Myanmar People's Voices Wherever She Goes Through Revolution. Very Respectful One.
Don't Understimate
the Power of Girls
See more on Twitter about #WhatsHappeninginMyanmar
#myanmargirl#asian beauty#asiangirl#myanmarbeauty#myanmartraditionaldress#myanmardress#asian girls#asianbeauty#asianfemale#traditionaldress#whatshappeninginmyanmar#milkteaalliance
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Mizzima Myanmar TV Channel Live Streaming Mizzima Myanmar TV Channel Live Streaming Various news videos, such as national, international, entertainment, business, and cultural news, can be viewed on the official websites.
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Take Action Now: Human Rights Defender Faces Three Years In Prison
Prominent human rights defender, Thin Thin Aung is facing three years in prison over materials published and broadcast by the media outlet she co-founded. Thin Thin Aung has been targeted simply for her connection to news outlet Mizzima, which has reported on the Myanmar coup and subsequent human rights violations by security forces. She is among the more than 5,200 individuals who are in detention simply for the peaceful exercise of their rights to freedom of expression, association, and assembly
Media workers, as well as peaceful activists, human rights defenders, medical workers, political opponents, and critics of the military, continue to be targeted for arrest, detention, prosecution and imprisonment on politically-motivated grounds.
There are concerns regarding Thin Thin Aung’s health in detention. Already suffering from a chronic condition of asthma, she is at heightened risk in a crowded prison, which presents prime conditions for a Covid-19 outbreak.
Take action now - write to the authorities in Myanmar to call for Thin Thin Aung to be released. Please write before September 22 2021
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Sunday, March 21, 2021
Happiness Report: World shows resilience in face of COVID-19 (AP) The coronavirus brought a year of fear and anxiety, loneliness and lockdown, and illness and death, but an annual report on happiness around the world released Friday suggests the pandemic has not crushed people’s spirits. The editors of the 2021 World Happiness Report found that while emotions changed as the pandemic set in, longer-term satisfaction with life was less affected. “What we have found is that when people take the long view, they’ve shown a lot of resilience in this past year,” Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs, one of the report’s co-author, said from New York.
The Pandemic Stalls Growth in the Global Middle Class, Pushes Poverty Up Sharply (Pew Research Center) The COVID-19 pandemic is having a deep effect on the global economy. In January 2020, as reports of the novel coronavirus were emerging, the World Bank forecasted that the global economy would expand by 2.5% that year. In January 2021, with the pandemic still holding much of the world in its grip, the World Bank estimated that the global economy contracted by 4.3% in 2020, a turnabout of 6.8 percentage points. The economic downturn is likely to have diminished living standards around the world, pushing millions out of the global middle class and swelling the ranks of the poor. A new Pew Research Center analysis finds that the global middle class encompassed 54 million fewer people in 2020 than the number projected prior to the onset of the pandemic. Meanwhile, the number of poor is estimated to have been 131 million higher because of the recession.
Fallout from riot, virus leaves toxic mood on Capitol Hill (AP) The mood is so bad at the U.S. Capitol that a Democratic congressman recently let an elevator pass him by rather than ride with Republican colleagues who voted against certifying Joe Biden’s election. Republicans say it’s Democrats who just need to get over it—move on from the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, end the COVID-19 restrictions and make an effort to reach across the aisle toward bipartisanship. Not yet 100 days into the new Congress, the legislative branch has become an increasingly toxic and unsettled place, with lawmakers frustrated by the work-from-home limits imposed by the virus and suspicious of each other after the horrific riot over Trump’s presidency. Particularly in the House, which remains partly shuttered by the pandemic and where lawmakers heard gunshots ring out during the siege, trust is low, settled facts about the Jan. 6 riot are apparently up for debate and wary, exhausted lawmakers are unsure how or when the “People’s House” will return to normal.
US schools prepare summer of learning to help kids catch up (AP) After a dreary year spent largely at home in front of the computer, many U.S. children could be looking at summer school—and that’s just what many parents want. Although the last place most kids want to spend summer is in a classroom, experts say that after a year of interrupted study, it’s crucial to do at least some sort of learning over the break, even if it’s not in school and is incorporated into traditional camp offerings. Several governors, including in California, Kansas and Virginia, are pushing for more summer learning. And some states are considering extending their 2021-22 academic year or starting the fall semester early. Many cities, meanwhile, are talking about beefing up their summer school programs, including Los Angeles, Hartford, Connecticut and Atlanta—the latter of which considered making summer school compulsory before settling for strongly recommending that kids who are struggling take part.
Forecast for spring: Nasty drought worsens for much of US (AP) With nearly two-thirds of the United States abnormally dry or worse, the government’s spring forecast offers little hope for relief, especially in the West where a devastating megadrought has taken root and worsened. Weather service and agriculture officials warned of possible water use cutbacks in California and the Southwest, increased wildfires, low levels in key reservoirs such as Lake Mead and Lake Powell and damage to wheat crops. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s official spring outlook Thursday sees an expanding drought with a drier than normal April, May and June for a large swath of the country from Louisiana to Oregon. including some areas hardest hit by the most severe drought. And nearly all of the continental United States is looking at warmer than normal spring, except for tiny parts of the Pacific Northwest and southeast Alaska, which makes drought worse.
‘Tough’ U.S.-China talks signal rocky start to relations under Biden (Reuters) U.S. and Chinese officials concluded on Friday what Washington called “tough and direct” talks in Alaska, which laid bare the depth of tensions between the world’s two largest economies at the outset of the Biden administration. The two days of meetings, the first high-level in-person talks since President Joe Biden took office, wrapped up after a rare and fiery kickoff on Thursday when the two sides publicly skewered each others’ policies in front of TV cameras. The talks appeared to yield no diplomatic breakthroughs—as expected—but the bitter rivalry on display suggested the two countries had little common ground to reset relations that have sunk to the lowest level in decades. The run-up to the discussions in Anchorage, which followed visits by U.S. officials to allies Japan and South Korea, was marked by a flurry of moves by Washington that showed it was taking a firm stance, as well as by blunt talk from Beijing warning the United States to discard illusions that it would compromise.
Volcano Erupts In Southwestern Iceland After Thousands Of Earthquakes (NPR) A volcano on the Reykjanes Peninsula in southwest Iceland erupted Friday evening, producing a river of lava that could be seen from the capital, Reykjavik, 20 miles away. The eruption took place about three miles inland from the coast and poses little threat to residents. They were advised to stay indoors with windows closed against any gases that are released. This is the first eruption in the Reykjanes Peninsula in nearly 800 years, the Associated Press reported. Thousands of earthquakes took place in the weeks leading up to the eruption, the meteorological office reported. Earlier this week, swarms of earthquakes rattled the peninsula, with over 3,000 quakes on Sunday alone. Scientists attributed the earthquakes to magma intrusions, molten rock movement about a kilometer below the earth’s crust.
A New Year in Iran, but the country’s crises remain the same (AP) The Persian New Year, Nowruz, begins on the first day of spring and celebrates all things new. But as families across Iran hurried to greet the fresh start—eating copious crisp herbs, scrubbing their homes and buying new clothes—it was clear just how little the country had changed. A year into the coronavirus pandemic that has devastated Iran, killing over 61,500 people—the highest death toll in the Middle East—the nation is far from out of the woods. And although Iranians had welcomed the election of President Joe Biden with a profound sigh of relief after the Trump administration’s economic pressure campaign, the sanctions that have throttled the country for three years remain in place. “I was counting down the seconds to see the end of this year,” said Hashem Sanjar, a 33-year-old food delivery worker with a bachelor’s degree in accounting. “But I worry about next year.”
2 journalists detained as Myanmar junta clamps down on press (AP) Two more journalists were detained in Myanmar on Friday, part of the junta’s intensifying efforts to choke off information about resistance to last month’s coup. Mizzima News reported that one of its former reporters, Than Htike Aung, and Aung Thura, a journalist from the BBC’s Burmese-language service, were detained by men who appeared to be plainclothes security agents outside a court in the capital of Naypyitaw. The journalists were covering legal proceedings against Win Htein, a detained senior official from the National League for Democracy, the party that ran the country before the takeover. The coup reversed years of slow progress toward democracy after five decades of military rule. In the face of persistent strikes and protests against the takeover, the junta has responded with an increasingly violent crackdown and efforts to severely limit the information reaching the outside world. Security forces have fired on crowds, killing hundreds, internet access has been severely restricted, private newspapers have been barred from publishing, and protesters, journalists and politicians have been arrested in large numbers.
Spectators from abroad to be barred from Tokyo Olympics (AP) At last it’s official after countless unsourced news reports and rumors: spectators from abroad will be barred from the postponed Tokyo Olympics when they open in four months. Officials said the risk was too great to admit ticket holders from overseas during a pandemic. The Japanese public has also opposed fans from abroad. Several surveys have shown that up to 80% oppose holding the Olympics, and a similar percentage opposed fans from overseas attending.
‘You can’t escape the smell’: mouse plague grows to biblical proportions across eastern Australia (The Guardian) Drought, fire, the Covid-19 pestilence and an all-consuming plague of mice. Rural New South Wales has faced just about every biblical challenge nature has to offer in the last few years, but now it is praying for another—an almighty flood to drown the mice in their burrows and cleanse the blighted land of the rodents. Or some very heavy rain, at least. It seems everyone in the rural towns of north-west NSW and southern Queensland has their own mouse war story. In posts online, they detail waking up to mouse droppings on their pillows or watching the ground move at night as hundreds of thousands of rodents flee from torchlight beams. After years of drought, rural NSW and parts of Queensland enjoyed a bumper crop due to the recent wet season. But this influx of new produce and grains has led to an explosion in the mouse population. Locals say they started noticing the swarms up north in October and the wave of rodents has been spreading south ever since, growing to biblical proportions.
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Prisoner of Conscience finds freedom in Buddha’s teachings
From childhood, Ma Thida dreamed of helping others―caring for the sick, sharing information despite censorship, and standing up for people’s rights. To stand against the oppression that had been stifling Myanmar’s progress for decades, she joined Aung San Suu Kyi and the many other activists in the National League for Democracy, campaigning steadfastly despite intimidation, harassment, and worse. Because of her efforts, the regime sent her to Insein Prison, where she faced serious illness and bleak conditions. She
She first found relief from her situation in the form of smuggled books, which she could only read secretly under a blanket. “So the whole night I was just sitting in a squatting position and reading,” she recalls. “It gave me so much strength, because my hunger is not just for having food to survive, but also for intellectual understanding. Without that I don’t think I can survive. That’s why the books are really like a tonic to me.”
Mizzima Myanmar
#insein prison#buddhism#myanmar#burma#news#Burmese#prisoner of conscience#human rights#article#ma thida#se asia#Burma coup#what’s happening in myanmar#burmacoup#war
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Raise Three Fingers for Democracy
Exhibition Information Board
Updated on May 4, 2021
Title: Raise Three Fingers for Democracy
An illegitimate takeover
On February 1st, democracy in Myanmar was taken hostage in a brutal coup. The proxy military party won a humiliating 33 of 476 seats in November elections that were declared free and fair by the election commission and international observers. After demands to seize the ballots to recount personally were rejected, they launched their coup in the early hours of the morning, arresting over 200 elected officials returning for parliament, including de-facto leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
Unprecedented nationwide protests broke out in a country still finding its democratic voice after a half-century of repression. A civil disobedience movement (CDM) formed. Doctors, teachers and government employees refused to work, joined by other essential sectors. Peaceful, creative protests filled the streets: families banging pots every night at 8pm, days of silence, highways blocked by 'broken down' cars.
Gradually, and then systematically, this was met with horrible brutality. The same military that perpetrated a genocide against the Rohingya now issued orders to shoot protestors in the head. They raid homes at night, and have arrested over 5,000. They have killed over 700 people, including over 50 children, like 6-year-old Khin Myo Chit, shot in the belly to teach her family a lesson. They have tortured over 20 people to death in custody. The internet has been shut down to all but 0.5% of the population. Media outlets that refuse to publish propaganda have been outlawed.
Freedom of the press (54 words)
This now-illegal newspaper can give you a picture of what is happening right now. It’s journalists continue to report while on the run.
[QR code & Screen set to: Mizzima reporting from a safe house]
To understand the nature of the military and their police stooges, you only need a few entries on the lists of this civil organisation tracking and verifying killings, arrests, indefinite detention and warrants:
[QR code & Screen set to: Link to PDF]
Freedom of expression
But there is still hope. The majority resists. People continue the fight every day. A symbol of hope is #threefingers. Used before in other Asian countries where democracy is under threat (the milk tea countries), it has gained major prominence in Myanmar. A group of Myanmar artists, illustrators and creatives used images of this symbol of resistance from the very first day. Since, you can see it in marches, at funerals, through the prison bars, in messages of defection, in the United Nations General Assembly, and where support can be found. It can be carried with you everywhere, and it can mean everything to those who show it.
These artists who first raised these totems of democracy in Myanmar are now putting out the call for support. Already artists, illustrators and cartoonists from around the world, from the UK to Korea, to Australia, Thailand, Hong Kong and farther have begun to return the call. Now, they need more people to join in. The fall of democracy is a worldwide phenomenon – this is just the latest front. They need YOU to stand for democracy, and help them delegitimise this brutal regime.
At night, after a day of beatings, shootings, horrors, frightened of gunshots and raids, losing hope, the young people continuing this fight can look at these artworks, songs, dances or messages, and see hope, solidarity and others that still believe in what they are risking everything for.
Every #threefingers raised builds awareness and support for human rights, freedom and democracy in Myanmar.
Message from our founder
(VIDEO: “We Will Win” by Latt Thone Chuang)
Quote
“At a very basic level, art plays a very practical role. It gets people energized, it makes people emotional, and it gets people to organise and get things done.
Art helps to frame the direction of the protest movement.
Art can also create hope and resilience. It takes people to another level and can help uplift the mood of the people.
I believe art – in all its forms – can give strength to people.
That’s what art can do.
It’s important to keep creating because you can’t handcuff ideas.
You can’t kill art with bullets.
– Maw Khun Thit, Latt Thone Chaung
Night arrests
At night, gunshots and flashbang explosives can be heard across the town. Security forces raid homes, trying to arrest and intimidate dissenting voices. Having suspended laws requiring warrants to search, they leave family members with no knowledge of the charges, location, or condition of their loved ones. Communities set up unarmed neighbourhood watch groups, local men and women who stayed up all night, banging pots to warn of approaching security forces.
Killing children (104 words)
On 23 March, security forces entered the home of 6-year-old Khin Myo Chit and her family in Mandalay. They asked her father if anyone was hiding in the house, and accused him of lying when he said no. When the girl ran to her father's arms, they shot her. She died before they could reach medics. Her last words were: "I can't father, it's too painful". Her brother was arrested and the family are yet to learn of his charge or whereabouts. Khin Myo Chit is one of over 50 child fatalities. All but one on record was shot.
Ethnic minorities
The coup instigator, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, was found by UN Investigators as the perpetrator the Rohingya genocide and publicly stated he would 'clear up the Bengali problem'. The coup has led to the formation of a National Unity Government of protest leaders, a government that previously had to keep the military on side, and ethnic minorities targeted by the military including the Kachin, Karen and Chin. The Rohingya, the most known of these minorities internationally, are anti-military and are showing the three finger salute themselves.
Targeting poor communities
Since the start of the coup, many noticeable groups have been targeted: elected officials and election monitors, doctors for treating injured protestors, government employees and bank employees for refusing to work. But the violence has been worse in neighbourhoods where poor or factory workers live and work. With the least access to medical or legal help, and the least ability to escape or hide, they continue to risk the most for democracy.
Internet shutdown
Internet and mobile phones were inaccessible to all but the super rich until after 2014. A sim card cost over $3000. Then as democratisation opened up the country, it swelled to over 80% smartphone coverage. Over the last 2 years, Myanmar’s military has conducted the world’s longest internet shutdown over eight townships and a million people in Chin and Rakhine states, to suppress information about its actions there. Now this darkness is returning everywhere: just 0.5% of the population have access to the internet, only then to stop the banking system collapsing. And yet these short years of information have taken root – people know now that they deserve more.
Creative freedom in danger
For fifty years before 2012, art and expression was repressed in Myanmar. It left just one art school, teaching stuffy figurative pastiche. Censorship was visible every day, in newspapers with black bars, banned books, arrests of cartoonists or performers. Art lay dormant, but never died. In 8 short years, expression flourished fearlessly once more. Now over 35 artists, directors and performers have been arrested, and more than 200 are on the run from arrest warrants. Yet, they continue to speak out and use their expression to fight oppression.
Can you help them?
These artists need your words, pictures and actions to amplify their calls. They need you now to fight for democracy under threat in Myanmar and everywhere.
Message of hope
Quote 2 (with Nobel Aung artwork)
“The most inspiring thing has been the unity of people. We all have the same objective. This was apparent since the very first night of the coup. People continue to bang their pots and pans every night at 8 pm to make noise, every day even until now. We are not scared of guns anymore but the military is scared of the noise we make. We give courage and inspiration to each other.”
-Nobel Aung, illustrator and animator
Founder of Raise Three Fingers
Mandatories:
About:
Raise Three Fingers (formerly Art for Freedom MM) is a campaign founded by artists and creatives from Myanmar to bring the global art community together, stand up for democracy and highlight the humanitarian crisis unfolding since the military coup on February 1 2021.
Founders:
Art for Freedom MM
Using Art and Illustration to uphold human rights for Myanmar.
Latt Thone Chaung
We are here to celebrate all forms of creative protests against the military coup in Myanmar.
The Professional Cartoonists’ Organisation (UK)
Home to some of the UK’s finest cartoonists’ talent.
Collaborators:
Fine Acts - A global nonprofit creative studio for social impact
Human Rights Foundation - We partner with world-changing activists in creating innovative solutions to unite the world against tyranny.
Arts Help - Founded on the principle of art making the world a better place, Arts Help is the #1 art publisher, with a community of 2.5 million members.
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Tourist scarcity prompts Bagan hot-air balloonists to suspend services
via Mizzima, 26 February 2023: Due to a sharp decline in foreign tourists after the 2021 Myanmar coup, only one out of four hot-air balloon companies is expected to operate in Bagan after April. #myanmar #balloon #tourism
via Mizzima, 26 February 2023: Due to a sharp decline in foreign tourists after the 2021 Myanmar coup, only one out of four hot-air balloon companies is expected to operate in Bagan after April. Hot-air balloon operators in Myanmar’s former tourist Mecca of Bagan are having to adjust their operational plans due to a substantial drop in foreign tourist numbers due largely to the fall-out from the…
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Scores of funerals held across Myanmar
Scores of funerals held across Myanmar
Yangon: Scores of funerals were held across Myanmar on Sunday after the daily death toll resulting from clashes between protesters and the military junta rose to its highest-ever level. The funeral processions were held in cities including Yangon, Meiktila, Monywa and Mandalay, dpa news agency quoted media outlets Mizzima, Khit Thit News and RFA as saying in reports. The latest violence, which…
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16 media houses including four book stores’ licenses have been revoked
Yangon, September 3
Following the military coup, media and journalists have become open and physical targets of the junta, and Myanmar’s freedom of speech back to the dark age. The junta revoked the publishing license of a Karenni state based-media, Kantarawaddy Times on August 29, and a total of 16 media houses including four book store licenses have already been revoked.
The notification stated it violated the Printing and Publishing Law, and cancelled its publishing license.
A dozen of media houses including Kantarawaddy Times, Myanmar Now၊ Democratic Voice of Burma၊ Khit Thit၊ 7 Days၊ Mizzima၊ Myitkyina Journal၊ The 74 Media၊ Tachileik News Agency၊ Delta News Agency, Zayar Times and Kamayut and book stores; Shwe Lab, Lwin Oo, Win Toe Aung, and Yan Aung are on the licenses revoked lists.
The publishing license of Shwe Lab was revoked for the LGBT love tale My Possessive Step-Bro in April 2022. The following month, Lwin Oo’s publishing license was revoked after the author Ronan Lee's MYANMAR'S ROHINGYA GENOCIDE was circulated and sold via social media in May.
Many journalists have already been assaulted, shot at and injured while covering protests, illegally arrested, prosecuted and charged with long-term in prison for carrying out their journalistic work. At least 144 journalists have been arrested and 63 remain in detention, according to collected data by BAP.
Burma Associated Press
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Illegal Myanmar migrant workers struggle to avoid Thai authorities | Mizzima Myanmar News and Insight
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미얀마 숙박업소, 금지 언론사 방송 제공 금지 명령
미얀마 숙박업소, 금지 언론사 방송 제공 금지 명령
[애드쇼파르] 2021년 11월 23일 국가관리위원회는 미얀마 호텔과 게스트하우스를 대상으로 폐간 및 폐업 명령이 내려진 5개 언론사 Myanmar NOW, Khit Thit Media, DVB, Mizzima, 7Day의 방송을 투숙객들에게 제공하는 것을 금지하도록 명령하였다. 이에 모든 숙박업체들은 불법으로 규정된 위성 수신기를 30일이내로 신고하도록 하였다.
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