Spotlight & Most popular Burma/Myanmar Related News (Sept 2011)
By Zin Linn Sep 02, 2011 8:17PM UTC
Today state-owned New Light of Myanmar newspaper accused KIO/KIA of forcibly recruiting villagers in Dawphonyan Sub-Township into their armed forces.It said that KIO/KIA forced local people to join them, and otherwise they are not allowed to live in the villages. The ethnic armed group proclaims that one man from each household in lower Tarsai Village, upper Tarsai Village, Teinmakyaing Village and Mongma Village in Dawphonyan Sub-Township must join KIO/KIA.
Such act of KIO/KIA shows that they prove a total disregard for the wishes of the local people wishing for peace and undermined the stability of Kachin State, and security and socio-economy of the rural people, the government media said.
However, Salang Kaba Lar Nan, Joint General Secretary-2 of the KIO, dismissed the government newspaperâs accusation as baseless since those villages are under the governmentâs administration. Moreover, members of the KIO/KIA join up the group at their will, he said.
Meanwhile, China is speeding up the construction of the Irrawaddy dam although the armed conflict still going on in Kachin State, quoting an urgent August-31-dated statement released by the Kachin Development Networking Group (KDNG), the Kachin News Group said.
The Myitsone dam is being constructed by workers of the state-owned China Power Investment Corporation (CPI) and the Burma-Asia World Company, plus 700 additional construction workers from the Chinese state-owned Sino-hydro Corporation, Ms. Ah Nan, spokesperson for the KDNG said.
In October 2009, the Thailand-based Kachin Development Networking Group (KDNG) published a report â âResisting the floodâ â highlighting the implementation of the Myitsone dam project on the Irrawaddy River. The report demanded to stop the project sponsored by the China Power Investment Corporation (CPI), the main investor and contractor.
The dam project creates unwelcome impacts like social, environmental, livelihood, cultural and security problems for tens of thousands of people around the dam location and downstream of the dam. The report states that more than 15,000 people in 60 villages around the dam sites are being forcibly relocated without proper resettlement plans being drawn up by the Burmese military regime. They lost their means of livelihood such as farming, fishing and collection of non-timber forest products.
Besides, over 150,000 people in Kachinâs capital Myitkyina, 27 miles downstream of the dam, will have to live under the constant threat of floods from the dam if there is an earthquake. The dam is less than 100 kilometers from a major fault line in an earthquake-prone area, warned the KDNG report.
More Chinese construction machinery and materials are being transported to the Myitsone Dam site by 12-wheel trucks on the Myitkyina-Kambaiti Road, referring local eyewitnesses of border town Kambaiti, KNG reported.
After a new military conflict started between the Burmese Army and the KIA in June, in Kachin State, the KIA post along the Myitkyina-Kambaiti route banned trucks loaded with construction materials and equipment, according to truck drivers on that road. The KIA also damaged the key bridges on the road using mines. Part of the Stilwell Road (also called Ledo) was reconstructed in 2006, at a cost of 97 million Yuan (US$15.2) by Chinese companies from Yunnan province.
The Kachin Independence Organization (KIO), the political wing of the KIA, sent an open letter to Chinese President, Hu Jintao, in March, urging a halt to the Irrawaddy Myitson Dam construction because it will lead civil war in the country.
According to the KDNG statement, the Chinese communist government has refused the KIO request.
With the help of the KDNG, Kachin ethnic people around the world have protested by sending an appeal letter with many signatures via the Chinese Embassies in five cities such as Bangkok, London, New Delhi, Singapore and Wellington addressed to Premier Wen Jiabao. They made a fervent appeal in March 2010 to stop the Myitsone Hydropower project in Kachin State.
The 500 foot dam has been under construction at the confluence (Myitsone) of the Mali Hka River and NâMai Hka River, 27 miles north of the Kachin capital, Myitkyina, beginning in December, 2009, and it will cost 3.6 billion dollars.
Most of the 6000 MW of electricity produced will be sold to China.
In a statement issued on 11 August, Burmaâs Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi said the dam endangers the flow of the Irrawaddy River, which she described as âthe most significant geographical feature of the country.â
âWe believe that, taking into account the interests of both countries, both governments would hope to avoid consequences which might jeopardize lives and homes,â Suu Kyi emphasized. âTo safeguard the Irrawaddy is to save from harm our economy and our environment, as well as to protect our cultural heritage,â she added.
WikiLeaks publishes all its US State Department cables; former media partners attack the move
Raphael G. Satter, Associated Press, On Friday September 2, 2011, 11:00 am EDT
LONDON (AP) — WikiLeaks disclosed its entire archive of U.S. State Department cables Friday, much if not all of it uncensored — a move that drew stinging condemnation from major newspapers which in the past collaborated with the anti-secrecy group’s efforts to expose corruption and double-dealing.Many media outlets, including The Associated Press, previously had access to all or part of the uncensored tome. But WikiLeaks’ decision to post the 251,287 cables on its website makes potentially sensitive diplomatic sources available to anyone, anywhere at the stroke of a key. American officials have warned that the disclosures could jeopardize vulnerable people such as opposition figures or human rights campaigners.
A joint statement published on the Guardian’s website said that the British publication and its international counterparts — The New York Times, France’s Le Monde, Germany’s Der Spiegel and Spain’s El Pais — “deplore the decision of WikiLeaks to publish the unredacted State Department cables, which may put sources at risk.”
Previously, international media outlets — and WikiLeaks itself — had redacted the names of potentially vulnerable sources, although the standard has varied and some experts warned that even people whose names had been kept out of the cables were still at risk.
But now many, and possibly even all, of the cables posted to the WikiLeaks website carried unredacted names, making it easy to identify dissidents in authoritarian countries such as Russia, China or Myanmar.
WikiLeaks staff members have not returned repeated requests for comment sent in the past two days. But in a series of messages on Twitter, the group seemed to suggest that it had no choice but to publish the archive because copies of the document were already circulating online following a security breach.
WikiLeaks has blamed the Guardian for the blunder, pointing out that a sensitive password used to decrypt the files was published in a book put out by David Leigh, one of the paper’s investigative reporters and a collaborator-turned-critic of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
But the Guardian, Leigh and others have rejected the claim. Although the password was in fact published in Leigh’s book about seven months ago, Guardian journalists have suggested that the real problem was that WikiLeaks posted the encrypted file to the Web by accident and that Assange never bothered to change the password needed to unlock it.
In their statement, the Guardian’s international partners lined up to slam the 40-year-old former computer hacker.
“We cannot defend the needless publication of the complete data — indeed, we are united in condemning it,” the statement read. It added: “The decision to publish by Julian Assange was his, and his alone.”
The media organizations’ rejection is a further blow to WikiLeaks, whose site is under financial embargo and whose leader remains under virtual house arrest in an English country mansion pending extradition proceedings to Sweden on unrelated sexual assault allegations.
It’s also a sign of the borderless online whistleblower’s increasing estrangement from traditional media outlets. Assange and his supporters have long feuded with the Guardian and The New York Times, and in a recent statement the group noted that other Western media organizations had “slowed their rate of publishing” stories derived from the cables.
As a result, the anti-secrecy site said it would increasingly turn to “crowdsourcing” — that is, relying on Internet users to sift through its leaked documents and flag important material.
It’s a relatively new tactic for the group, which has in the past relied on mainstream partners to organize and promote its spectacular leaks of classified information — including U.S. intelligence documents detailing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Whether such collaborations will continue is unclear.
Amid the latest controversy, the press freedom group Reporters Without Borders said it had temporarily suspended its WikiLeaks “mirror site.” Such sites act as carbon-copies of their originals, relieving pressure due to heavy traffic and preserving data in case of attack.
In a statement, Reporters Without Borders said it had “neither the technical, human or financial resources to check each cable” for information that could harm innocent people and thus “has to play safe.”
The U.S. State Department has also condemned the latest release.
By Kyle Almond, CNN
September 2, 2011 7:54 a.m. EDT
Country/territory   Score   Surveys used   Standard deviation
Somalia                   1.1           3                       0.3
Afghanistan             1.4           4                       0.3
Myanmar                  1.4          3                       0.5
Iraq                         Â
Sudan                      1.6           5                       0.4
Turkmenistan          1.6           3                       0.2
Uzbekistan              1.6           6                       0.2
Chad                        1.7           6                       0.2
Burundi                    1.8           6                       0.3
Angola                     1.9           6                       0.2Editor’s Note: Each Friday, CNN will examine statistics or world rankings to show how countries and territories compare with one another. Who’s the best? Who’s the worst? And where does the United States fit in? You’ll find those answers in our Country Comparisons series.
(CNN) — Somalia, Myanmar and Afghanistan have the lowest scores on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, which measures how people in 178 countries and territories view corruption in their public sectors.
On a scale of 0-10, with 10 being “very clean” and 0 being “highly corrupt,” all three countries score below 1.5. Somalia is the lowest at 1.1, while Myanmar and Afghanistan are tied for second at 1.4.
At the other end of the list are Denmark, New Zealand and Singapore, which score the highest at 9.3.
The United States, with a score of 7.1, is among the countries viewed as least corrupt. It’s tied for 22nd overall with Belgium. But while the U.S. is well ahead of neighbor Mexico (3.1), it seems to have some work to do to catch Canada (8.9).
The latest scores were drawn from 13 surveys and assessments published between January 2009 and September 2010 by “independent and reputable institutions,” according to Transparency International. It defines corruption as the abuse of entrusted power for private gain.
Transparency International is a nongovernmental organization headquartered in Berlin. It acknowledges that corruption, by nature, is often hidden and therefore difficult to quantify, but it says it has found people’s perceptions to be a reliable estimate over the long term.
Some other noteworthy scores from the index:
** Because of activist Anna Hazare and his recent hunger strike, corruption has been brought to the forefront in India.
The country scored a 3.3 on the most recent index, putting it among the countries viewed as most corrupt.
** Libya (2.2) and Syria (2.5), were also near the top of the perceived corruption list, something that might not be a surprise considering the recent unrest there. Yemen also scored a 2.2.
Egypt (3.1) and Tunisia (4.3) scored better, but not by much. Again, it’s important to point out that these surveys were conducted well before these two countries’ longtime leaders were ousted.
August 31, 2011
By Baroness Glenys Kinnock
Desperate for international legitimacy, Burmaâs new president has been keen to give the impression of change in the country. ASEAN shouldnât be fooled.In May, I wrote in The Diplomat how Burmaâs new dictator had experienced a tough start to his presidency. Rigged elections held last November, and then the release of Aung San Suu Kyi, were part of a plan by the dictatorship to gain acceptance by the international community. When Burmaâs new parliament opened and Thein Sein made a grand speech promising change, he was undoubtedly hoping that his government would finally gain the legitimacy it craves.
But things didnât go according to planned. First, the United States, the European Union, and Canada refused to relax economic sanctions. Then came the blow that must have hurt most of all: the Association for Southeast Asian Nations delayed a decision on whether Burma could assume chairmanship of the organisation when its turn comes in 2014.
Now Thein Sein is back with Plan B, a new charm offensive designed to create the impression of change, while so far not making any actual changes at all. A flurry of new initiatives took place over the summer. Talks were held with Aung San Suu Kyi, first with Aung Kyi, a specially assigned liaison minister, and then with President Thein Sein himself. Slogans attacking exiled media organisations were dropped from state-owned newspapers, Aung San Suu Kyi was allowed to travel outside Rangoon, political exiles were told they could return home, and there was an offer of a ceasefire to armed ethnic political groups.
Then, last week, the UN Special Rapporteur was allowed back into Burma, after effectively being banned after calling for the United Nations to establish a commission of inquiry into possible war crimes and crimes against humanity in Burma. In a masterstroke, he was taken to the new parliament, a move seen by many as conferring legitimacy on that powerless rubber stamp affront to democracy.
These series of initiatives have generated great excitement in diplomatic circles and in the media. But if one goes through them one by one, two extraordinary things stand out. First, not one of these initiatives is substantive, and, second, not one of them is even new.
Aung San Suu Kyi and Burmaâs democracy movement have identified three top priorities for change: the release of political prisoners, a nationwide ceasefire and genuine dialogue. Despite all the recent initiatives, and all the positive attention theyâve received, not one political prisoner has been released, and indeed two more were sentenced last week. Thein Seinâs government has been breaking ceasefire agreements, not making new ones, and there have been talks but still no dialogue process.
For those of us who have followed Burma for many years, thereâs also an eerie sense of dĂ©jĂ vu. Thein Sein hasnât taken any steps that his predecessors Than Shwe or Ne Win hadnât already taken. They didnât lead to change then, and they should be treated with scepticism now. The only thing that is new is that these initiatives have come so close together.
This haste could be explained by Thein Seinâs desperate desire to win the ASEAN chairmanship. Plan B appears to be presenting the impression of change, without doing anything at all different.
In May, I argued that ASEAN could use the chairmanship as an opportunity to force Thein Sein to make small steps toward real reform. That opportunity is still there today. ASEAN didnât accept the elections and release of Aung San Suu Kyi as substantive change and it shouldnât accept this charm offensive as substantive change either.
ASEAN must hold its ground and force Thein Sein to resort to Plan C, namely actual substantive steps, such as the release of political prisoners. ASEAN can offer Thein Sein what he wants, and thatâs far too much leverage to be given away cheaply.
Baroness Glenys Kinnock is Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Democracy in Burma, in the British Parliament. She is a former minister in the British Foreign Office and a former MEP.
September 3, 2011
There’s a softening stance on visitors to Burma since the release of the democracy leader, writes Steve Meacham.Should you go to Burma? Is it unethical for tourists to spend money visiting a country run by a military dictatorship with an appalling human rights record?
Or is the greater good served not by boycotts or isolation but the constant breeze of outsiders inevitably bringing change over time?
That’s the dilemma travellers have faced since the 1990 elections, won by the National League for Democracy, but overturned by the military junta – resulting in the house arrest of the league’s figurehead, Aung San Suu Kyi.
With her long-delayed release on November 13 last year, the Nobel Peace Prize winner relaxed her stance on foreign tourism. While Suu Kyi hasn’t embraced it, she seemed to endorse the arrival of overseas visitors provided they did not swell the coffers of the ruling generals.
As the campaign coordinator for the Sydney-based protest group Campaign Burma Australia, Zetty Brake, puts it: “Last year the NLD’s position shifted from ‘Don’t visit Burma’ to ‘It’s OK for small independent groups to come provided they engage with the local people’.”
Peregrine Adventures and budget twin Gecko’s Adventures both ran tours to Burma throughout the 15-year boycott. The Asia destination manager for Peregrine, Stuart Lyall, says Suu Kyi’s change of heart has led to a 25 per cent increase in international tourism to Burma in the past year.
Peregrine and Gecko’s have always worked with the same husband-and-wife tour company in Rangoon, Lyall says. Group size is kept to about 15 and government- aligned businesses are avoided, although there’s no alternative to the government-owned railway. “We only use privately-owned hotels and transport, including airlines,” Lyall says. “But we can’t avoid the 5 per cent VAT tax or the 2 per cent foreign currency tax.”
Sue Badyari is the chief executive of World Expeditions, the other major Australian operator currently taking tourists into Burma (at least one other Australian operator is expected to renew tours soon). She says Suu Kyi’s announcement in November “was a fundamental turning point”. But World Expeditions has always used “an excellent local partner” who “ensures the flow of funds to [Burma] would land in the right hands”.
“We are not saying that tourism will change things for [the people of Burma] overnight,” she says. “But, if operators structure their contracts in a way that delivers income streams for private enterprise, which provides employment and therefore benefits thousands of people and families, then we view this as a powerful and positive vehicle for change.”
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade website, Smart Traveller, advises Australians to exercise caution and be aware of the political situation. Lonely Planet has a downloadable chapter on the ethics of travelling to Burma.
Campaign Burma Australia now accepts the NLD’s partial embrace of tourism. So what does it recommend to Australian travellers? “Travel as an independent or in small groups,” Brake says.
Published on September 2, 2011
Rangoon – A US band is to make a rare appearance in Burma this month in the latest sign of a possible diplomatic thaw between the military-dominated country and the West, officials said Friday.Earth String is to be in Burma September 21-25, a US embassy official said without providing details.
The band’s visit, sponsored by the embassy, was seen as the latest sign of slight improvements in Burma’s relations with Western democracies after its November general election, the first in 20 years.
“I think all relations usually start with the cultural sector,” one Asian diplomat in Rangoon said. “This is a positive sign for American-Myanmar [Burmese] relations.”
“I hope it is a positive sign for American-Myanmar relations because we haven’t seen these kinds of musical bands here for sometime,” said Nay Zin Latt, a political adviser to the new government.
By JESSIE STENSLAND
Whidbey News Times Assistant editor
Sep 01 2011
An 18-year-old refugee from Burma drowned while swimming at a Deception Pass State Park lake Saturday afternoon, according to the Island County Coronerâs Office.Sang Cung Hnin was at Cranberry Lake with a group of friends from a Kent church group when the tragedy occurred. Hnin and his family escaped from Burma, which is officially known as the military-dominated Republic of the Union of Myanmar, and had been living in Malaysia prior to moving to Kent just two weeks ago.
Island County Coroner Robert Bishop said he could find no explanation for the drowning. An autopsy revealed that Hnin was a completely healthy young man and his family members confirmed that he was a strong swimmer.
Bishop said he could only speculate that perhaps Hnin may have cramped while he was in the water.
On Saturday, Hnin and members of his church group were swimming in the deeper of two areas of the lake sectioned off for swimming. Members of the group saw Hnin raise his arms and yell for help before going under.
âThere wasnât a lot of warning. It just happened so fast,â said Jack Hartt, manager of Deception Pass State Park.
A man on the shore called 911 just after 3 p.m.
Hartt said park rangers and volunteers quickly searched for Hnin, but were unable to find him. Hartt said there was no visibility near the bottom of 10 to 12 feet of water. Park Ranger Benjamin Cooksey formed a shoulder-to-shoulder search line of park staff and volunteers; they dove down every five feet or so.
Finally, Cooksey found Hninâs body and pulled him to shore. Bishop said 57 minutes elapsed from the 911 call to when they got him to shore. He was taken to the hospital, but it was too late.
Hninâs official cause of death is listed as an accidental drowning.
RUSSIA â MYANMAR
AsiaNews.it – Russiaâs Gazprom moving into Myanmar
Officials from the Russian energy giant visit Naypyidaw. The stat-run company wants new partners in the East to offset its excessive reliance on the European market.
Moscow (AsiaNews) â In order to diversify its business and reduce its excessive reliance on an increasingly hostile European market, Russian energy giant Gazprom plans to conduct geological surveys in Myanmar, the Democratic Voice of Burma website reported, citing the International Oil Daily. For this purpose, representatives of the Russian state-run company went to the Myanmar capital of Naypyidaw for talks with local authorities.Russia has the largest proven reserves of gas in the world, making Gazprom the largest extractor of natural gas in the world as well as the largest Russian company.
Its profits for the first quarter of this year reached a record 468 billion rubles (US$ 16.3 billion), 44 per cent higher than the same period last year, far more than experts had forecast.
Greater sales because of the interruption of Libyan supplies and rising prices domestically and in the European Union have helped the Russian company. However, only Europeans can buy Russian oil and gas because almost every Russian pipeline flows towards Europe.
In view of the European Commissionâs desire to move towards greater energy independence from Moscow, Russiaâs monopolistic giant is seeking new partners among individual companies that have long-term contracts (like Germanyâs RWE) as well as new markets in the East, betting on Chinaâs growing needs, which should outstrip Europeâs by 2030. At present, Beijing buys gas from its Central Asian neighbours as well as Myanmar.
The officials who visited Naypyidaw were from Gazpromâs international up stream branch, Gazprom EP International, which is registered in the Netherlands, an EU member state that is party to EU sanctions on Myanmar.
The Myanmar government is equally interested in working with the Russians because of the expertise the company can offer in terms of equipment, storage facilities, pipelines and knowhow. The Russian company can in fact conduct geological surveys and exploration that local companies cannot do.
Friday, 02 September 2011 Super Admin
A leaked 2006 US diplomatic cable tells about how the police extorted money from Burmese Chin refugees in exchange for their freedom.(Free Malaysia Today) –Â A leaked US diplomatic cable from 2006 has revealed the plight of the Burmese Chin refugees stranded in Malaysia and the urgency sought by the US diplomats for Washington to âsettle large numbers of these refugees as quickly and smoothly as possibleâ.
The KL-based US diplomats also urged their government, in particular the Bureau of Population, Refugee and Migration (PRM), to grant additional funding to help out the Chin refugees.
âInstitutional funding is needed to provide basic medical treatment and English language training for both children and working adults.
âGiven our pending resettlement of thousands of Chin refugees from Malaysia, modest investments in immunizations, medical care and English language training in Malaysiaâs relatively low cost environment would yield substantial benefits for both the Chin refugees and the United States,â said the US embassy cable dated Nov 20, 2006, to the State Department in Washington DC.
The cable was leaked by whistleblower site WikiLeaks and handed over to Raja Petra Kamarudinâs Malaysia Today website which published it today.
The US diplomats also stated that they would work with the relevant US government agencies and the UNâs refugee agency â the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) â to resettle the Chin refugees away from Malaysia quickly.
The additional funding sought by the US diplomats were also to be used for basic medical and education needs of the Chins and other refugee communities in Malaysia, stated the cable.
Camps close to Putrajaya
The cable was a result of a visit by the US embassyâs political officer to two jungle camps housing about 200 Chin refugees near the Malaysian administrative capital in Putrajaya on Nov 15, 2006.
The cable noted the physical characteristics of the camps, which were made out of shelters using wooden poles, plywood for elevated sleeping platforms, and fluttering sheets of plastic for roofing and walls.
The cable also pointed out that âa sense of devotion to Christianity pervaded each campâ.
âEach camp contained a church structure (the largest and most well-maintained structure in each camp) and all of the approximately 100 square foot dwellings viewed by political officer prominently displayed crosses or pictures of Jesus.â
The refugees at the two camps have not been visited by UNHCR representatives during at least the past two years, said the cable quoting the refugees, and as many as seven camps containing up to 1,000 Chin refugees were erected within five miles of the Prime Ministerâs office in Putrajaya in 2006.
The interests of the Chin refugees in Malaysia were taken care by the Alliance of Chin Refugees (ACR) and the Chin Refugee Committee (CRC). The cable stated that CRC claimed to have about 17,400 members in Malaysia.
Police extortion
The Chin refugees had also informed the visiting US diplomat of their fear of police extortions and raids.
The diplomat stated that the police were aware of the presence of the camps.
By Debra Chong
September 02, 2011
KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 2 â As many as 1,000 unregistered Myanmar Chin refugees live in fear of police harassment in primitive jungle camps within 8km of the Prime Ministerâs Office in Putrajaya, according to US diplomatic cables leaked today.The camps, located on the fringe of palm oil plantations, were set up as far back as four years ago and some are known to the police who have carried out regular raids, threatening the unregistered refugees with arrests and deportation while allegedly extorting money in exchange for letting them go.
According to the leaked cable released on Malaysia Today, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) have been unhelpful in registering the Myanmar Chins, deeming them to be âon-emergencyâ cases and leaving them more vulnerable to exploitation.
The UNHCR registration provides the only form of protection to refugees, including children. Without it, they are unable to have access to legal medical care and education and risk being shipped home if caught by the authorities.
While Malaysian law forbids refugees from working in the country, many at the Putrajaya camps were employed illegally as day labourers in the palm oil plantations for RM25 a day, but were often denied even that pay for one reason or another.
The cable noted that as of July 1, 2006 only 7,805 Chin had been UNHCR-registered as âpersons of concernâ in Malaysia, a moderate increase from 6,566 at year-end 2005.
However, unofficial US sources in the cable put the number of Chin refugees in Malaysia much higher, at about 20,000.
âWorking on the plantations for little money and uncertain payment of wages, receiving access to medical care only in some emergency situations, and facing arrest and deportation if captured by Malaysian authorities, unregistered Chin refugees living in the jungle remain among the most vulnerable and exploited refugees in Malaysia,â the cable said.
It added that one Chin told its translator: âWe would rather die here than go back to Burmaâ; it added that the refugees âremained unaware that the United States planned to resettle thousands of Chin refugees from Malaysiaâ.
The lives of refugees in Malaysia have come under the spotlight since Putrajaya admitted to a human trafficking problem and signed a deal with Canberra to exchange refugees.
The first boatload of refugees held on Christmas Island were set to be shipped to Malaysia as early as next week, but the deal, known popular in Australia as the âMalaysian Solutionâ, has crumbled after an Australian High Court deemed it illegal two days ago.
Friday, Sep 02, 2011
Research and Markets has announced the addition of GlobalData ‘s new report “Myanmar Oil Markets, 2011” to their offering.This profile is the essential source for top-level energy industry data and information. The report provides an overview of each of the key sub-segments of the energy industry in Myanmar.
It details the market structure, regulatory environment, infrastructure and provides historical and forecast statistics relating to the supply/demand balance for each of the key sub-segments. It also provides information relating to the crude oil assets (oil fields, refineries and pipelines) in Myanmar.
The report compares the investment environment in Myanmar with other countries in the region. The profiles of the major companies operating in the crude oil sector in Myanmar together with the latest news and deals are also included in the report.
Scope:
Historic and forecast data relating to production, consumption, imports, exports and reserves are provided for each industry sub-segment for the period 2000-2020.
Historical and forecast data and information for all the major oil fields, refineries, pipelines and storage terminals in Myanmar for the period 2000-2015.
Operator and equity details for major crude oil assets in Myanmar.
Key information relating to market regulations, key energy assets and the key companies operating in the Myanmar’s energy industry.
Information on the top companies in the Myanmar including business description, strategic analysis, and financial information.
Product and brand updates, strategy changes, R&D projects, corporate expansions and contractions and regulatory changes.
Key mergers and acquisitions, partnerships, private equity and venture capital investments, and IPOs.
Source: Business Wire
To access over 2000 of the latest oil projects from across the world visit Projects OGP for free trial today
Published on September 2, 2011 by Francis Wade
With its lax environmental laws, Burma has become a battleground for neighbouring countries keen to get their hands on the countryâs abundant natural resources. Francis Wade reports.Among the tens of thousands to have fled escalating conflict in Burmaâs border regions this year were some 50 labourers working for Ital-Thai, the Bangkok-based construction giant behind what is set to become Southeast Asiaâs largest industrial complex. The men had been toiling on a highway connecting the Thai town of Kanchanaburi to Tavoy in southern Burma, whose strategically vital location on the western side of the isthmus shared by both countries has set the mouths of Southeast Asian governments watering.
Billions of dollars are being pumped into the venture and 250 square kilometres of land are being transformed into a city of petrochemical and gas separation plants, plastics factories and an enormous deep-sea port. Major road and rail routes will link the port to regional economies hungry for greater trade with Europe and India, particularly China, whose traditional sea passage through the Strait of Malacca and into the South China Sea is increasingly vulnerable to foreign sabotage.
Burma: a goldmine
But like the myriad other infrastructure and energy projects that scar Burmaâs rivers and landscapes, huge animosity surrounds the Tavoy port. The workers who fled in late July became the first tangible sign that resistance to the project may well take on a military form, after their construction camp was hit by shelling from the rebel Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), which controls pockets of territory along Burmaâs border with Thailand. Although the KNLA claimed the shelling had been intended for a Burmese army column, the head of its political wing, the Karen National Union, was explicit about the antipathy it holds towards foreign business in Burma: shortly after the incident, Zipporah Sein referred to Ital-Thai as a âmilitary dictatorship-backed companyâ and warned that the KNLA âwill not take responsibility for [workersâ] security.â
The absence of environmental regulations has combined with abundant natural resources to make Burma a goldmine for neighbouring countries
The absence of environmental regulations has combined with abundant natural resources to make Burma a goldmine for neighbouring countries, few of whom have demonstrated a principled response to growing evidence that conflict there is intrinsically tied to its energy capabilities, and their demands for it. Fuelling much of this is China, whose soaring energy demands have seen Burmaâs rivers, topographically well-suited to hydropower, carved up by more than 40 dams, nearly all of which are financed by Bejiing. One of these, the Myitsone Dam in Kachin state in the north, will become the worldâs 15th largest, flooding an area the size of New York City and displacing 15,000 people. All of the output will go to southern Chinaâs Yunnan province, exacerbating resentment among Burmese, only 20 per cent of whom have regular access to electricity.
All-out offensives
Like the Tavoy project, the Myitsone Dam and many others like it have become focal points of the fighting that has raged in Kachin state since June, when Burmese troops attacked the Kachin Independence Army following its refusal to bow to demands to become a government-controlled border force.
China is increasingly exporting its megaprojects abroad, with Burma and its lax environmental laws making it an enticing destination
Burmese President Thein Sein is well aware that, in the face of US and EU sanctions, the future of his administration depends heavily on the economic crutch provided by sales of energy to neighbours â particularly China, but also Thailand and, increasingly, India. All-out offensives underway in the border regions are aimed at clearing them of potential saboteurs, and finally ending historic attempts by ethnic groups for autonomy.
A major byproduct of this has been the creation of hundreds of thousands of refugees, the majority of whom either flee from their homes into the surrounding countryside, or cross the border into China and Thailand. At least half a million internally displaced persons (IDPs) are estimated to be in eastern Burma alone, while nearly 150,000 populate the nine camps across the border in Thailand. China has also seen two major influxes in the past two years resulting directly from government efforts to eliminate rebels in Burmaâs north.
A UN report in June found that Burma was the worldâs fifth-highest source country for refugees, above Colombia and Sudan, where the ties that bind conflict to natural resources have been more closely analysed. Except for a handful of astute observations, most reporting on the conflict in Burma has not made this link explicit.
Shouldering the burden
The burden that Burma is being forced to shoulder is one that neighbouring countries could help carry but, through civilian resistance, are less inclined to: the Tavoy project, although dwarfing it in size, bears a strong similarity to the Maptaphut industrial complex and deep-sea port in Thailand, which independent experts claim has contributed to its home provinceâs unhealthy distinction as Thailandâs top cancer zone. Years of public lobbying by residents forced 76 companies to temporarily suspend operations there â two of these, the Thai state-owned PTTE oil company and Siam Cement Group, are now setting up shop in Tavoy, perhaps safe in the knowledge that popular protests there will be snuffed out.
Burmese are now joining the dots between localized human rights abuses along the border and a much larger, modern-day Great Game unfolding in Southeast Asia
Similarly China, which has had to grapple with alarming pollution rates that Beijing has admitted could significantly stunt the countryâs development, is increasingly exporting its megaprojects abroad, with Burma and its lax environmental laws making it an enticing destination.
The myriad conflicts over Burmaâs natural resources point to its rising status as a prized asset in a region where economic interdependence and connectivity are growing. Caught in a tug of war between China and India, both hungry for its bountiful energy capabilities and position as a geographical gateway to the developing economies lying to its east, Burma may well become something of a 21st century battleground for two of the worldâs rising superpowers, both of whom are lumbered with colossal populations whose demands for power increasingly dictate the imperatives of their leaders.
The sentiment expressed by the KNLAâs Zipporah Sein suggests, however, that Burmese are now joining the dots between localized human rights abuses along the border and a much larger, modern-day Great Game unfolding in Southeast Asia; furthermore, that the technicians, surveyors and construction workers that fled Julyâs fighting are the new face of this quasi neo-imperialist conquest, being run by governments whose need for domestic growth is a more pressing concern than the human cost required to achieve it. Perhaps most ominously, however, the changing dynamics of the region have seen the Burmese army emerge as a de facto proxy tasked with policing the investments of neighbouring countries, whose economies are set to race ahead on the produce from these wars whilst leaving thousands, possibly millions, of Burmese struggling in their wake.
Stanley Weiss
Founding Chairman, Business Executives for National Security
Posted: 9/1/11 01:49 PM ET
BALI — Set upon a blue background, the flag of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations depicts 10 yellow rice paddy stalks drawn in the middle of a red circle with a white border. The interesting thing about the banner is not merely that it represents the main colors of all ten ASEAN member state flags: Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and the Philippines. It is that 44 years to the day after ASEAN was founded, on August 8th — in a development that received little attention outside Asia — the flag was hoisted for the first time alongside the banners of all member states at hundreds of embassies and diplomatic missions around the world.Kicking off a year dedicated to the theme “Unity in Diversity”, ASEAN’s stirring declaration of interdependence is just the latest example of what ASEAN Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan describes to me as “our drive to raise our own bargaining power from a larger base.” At a time when the European Union’s struggle to rescue free-spending members Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Spain and Greece threatens to bring the whole continent tumbling down, ASEAN is rushing headlong to create a single economic community by 2015.
But there is more at stake here than simply the joint success or failure of 10 Asian nations, whose 600 million people represent a combined gross domestic product of $1.7 trillion — making it the sixth-largest economy in the world. ASEAN’s move to integration represents a different model of regional cooperation from the EU — less rooted in democracy, more tolerant of human rights violations, and more committed to sovereignty — that may go a long way toward defining how other regions evolve in the 21st Century.
In short, ASEAN “is making the case for a new kind of regionalism,” writes David Carson, the first resident U.S. Ambassador to ASEAN.
In academic circles, both the EU and ASEAN lend themselves to a discussion of a “post-Westphalian world.” Signed in 1648, the Peace of Westphalia not only ended 80 years of war in Europe, it also created the modern state system. Westphalia established fixed territorial boundaries for countries and established the idea that citizens of a respective country were subject primarily to the laws (and actions) of their respective governments. Conversely, it also created the notion that government is sovereign to rule its people as it sees fit. While giving rise to order, Westphalia also enabled three centuries of human rights abuses.
The 20th Century chipped away at the Westphalian idea. The creation of the United Nations and its Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 represented the first global expression of rights fundamental to all human beings, challenging the Westphalian concept of sovereignty. For half a century, it was applied delicately, often through sanctions, in places like South Africa. It wasn’t until the 1990s when the international community intervened directly on behalf of humanitarian principle in Haiti and Kosovo — a thread that runs through NATO’s intervention in Libya today.
Meanwhile, the creation of a unified EU in 1993 was the moment historians began speaking of a post-Westphalian world. ASEAN is putting an Asian spin on the concept of unity. As Surin Pitsuwan tells me, “The European model is our inspiration, not our model.”
Unlike the EU, the ASEAN vision doesn’t yet include a unified currency, joint visas, or the fully free flow of labor. While ASEAN has reportedly implemented 75 percent of the blueprint it passed in 2008 to create a regional trade bloc, unlike the EU, it also remains committed to a principal of nonintervention in the affairs of members, known as the “ASEAN Way.” While the EU pulls out its collective hair trying to restructure an intransigent Greece, ASEAN still takes a hands-off approach to member state Myanmar, whose brutal authoritarianism — despite recent elections — remains a drag on ASEAN’s global image.
Yet, while Western observers condemn ASEAN over Myanmar and argue that a wobblier version of the EU will never work because it lacks central authority to enforce common rules, ASEAN supporters say sarcastically to me, “the U.S. is one to talk.”
“Authoritarian leaders and their populations here are appalled by America’s lack of discipline and massive debt,” said Yohanes Sulaiman, a lecturer at Indonesia’s National Defense University, in a recent essay. “If democracy provides nothing but economic crisis, political squabbling, and gridlock, why would anyone want it? Better to stick with the authoritarian system of China or the semi-authoritarianism of Singapore.”
It is no accident that ASEAN members have been focused on increasing trade with one other (up 31 percent in 2010), with neighboring China (up 25 percent in the first half of 2011) and with other Asian countries. As Indonesian Vice President Boediono said at a recent ASEAN meeting, “the U.S. and Europe could no longer be the main engines of growth for the world economy.”
The danger is not simply that Western investors fall behind in one of the world’s fastest-growing regions. The danger is that as other regions consider similar integration — imagine a South Asian confederation of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and the Maldives or a future bloc in the Middle East.
In November, President Barack Obama is scheduled to attend the East Asian Summit in Bali. In his remarks, President Obama should take responsibility for America’s debt crisis and promise to be a better partner for Asia, articulate progressive benchmarks ASEAN could help Myanmar achieve by 2015 and link passage of a long-desired U.S.-ASEAN free trade agreement to those benchmarks being met.
It may not forestall the end of Westphalia- – but it could help extend Western leadership into the 21st Century.
Stanley A. Weiss is Founding Chairman of Business Executives for National Security, a nonpartisan organization based in Washington. The views expressed are his own.
The Irrawaddy – Bullies Across Borders?
By DAVID I. STEINBERG Thursday, September 1, 2011
The new, still fragile reform activities of the recently installed government in Burma have excited an outburst of vituperation from across international frontiers. As internal positive change is something external analysts have long sought, why is this so?Military regimes inherently bullyâorders are given and are expected to be obeyed. Orthodoxy is required and diverse views are eschewed. Line up and obey. So bullies inside Burma are a distressful but expected outcome of the nature of that military- dominated government. The deeply flawed elections were, in a sense, the outcome of such bullying.
But outside Burma? Developments within the country by the new government, with its probes toward positive change, have prompted an outburst of advocacy of heightened sanctions and renewed pressures for a UN Commission of Inquiry into human rights abuses at the very time when there is at least the possibility of reforms within the new âdisciplined-flourishing democracyâ. Even the possibility of positive change, still very much in process, has prompted a bullying type of orthodoxy from outside Burma by members of organizations devoted to liberty, democracy and human rights. This is quite disturbing.
Throughout the long rule of the military since 1988, voices in opposition abroad have often countered nuanced consideration of the problems of Burma with cries, reminiscent of President George W Bush, that if you are not with us you are against us. The new tone, with its more frenetic stridency, seems borne out of the fear that the internal changes at least advocated by the head of state may indeed have some positive results, thus perhaps prolonging the life of the new administration and making it more acceptable to the Western world, and threatening the sanctions regimen that had been serially imposed on Burma and its rulers. In effect, this new approach to internal change may postpone or prevent the âArab Springâ from reaching Burma.
These attacks have become personalized against some individuals who have studied that country and who have advocated the well-being of the diverse Burmese peoples. Democracy requires diversity of views and intelligent debate over alternatives, none of which may have simple answers. Policies based on dichotomies rarely are successful. The goals of those new bullies on the policy block are indeed admirableâhuman rights and improved freedoms and livesâand ones that can be widely shared and with which most of us would identify. Yet their tactics undercut the very goals they seek to reach.
It is a sad, bordering tragic, condition that those of us physically, but not emotionally, removed from the Burma scene do not seem to be able to negotiate with amicable, respectful, and dignified personal relations the necessary and desirable policy differences among us that are reflective of the democracy we would like to see in that country. Dissent is essential, but so is amity.
For years, some observers of the Burmese scene have said that some of the incessantly articulated goals of the military governmentânational unity, sovereignty, better health, education, agriculture, etc.âare ones that could conceptually prompt widespread approval, but the means by which those goals have been approached, the tactics used to attempt to enforce them on the people, subvert the very aims toward which they purportedly work. In other words, one cannot get there from here on that route.
But what about this new stridency? Can one get to democracy, however defined in some non-adjectivally modified form, in this manner? It would seem highly unlikely. One does not question the motivation of those organizations advocating liberalization and change in Burma, nor the intent of their members, but one must question some ill-advised temperamental actions becauseâas across the frontierâyou cannot get there from here.
David I. Steinberg is Distinguished Professor of Asian Studies, School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University. His latest volume isâBurma/Myanmar: What Everyone Needs to Knowâ (Oxford).
By BENJAMIN ZAWACKI Friday, September 2, 2011
It is time the EU work to establish a UN-led Commission of Inquiry into crimes against humanity and other crimes under international law in Burma.Four years ago this month, the people of Burma rose up in what became known as the âSaffron Revolution,â named after the Buddhist monks who eventually led the demonstrations. While the world initially condemned the security forcesâ violent crackdown that followed, several months later the Burmese authorities managed to deflect international criticism by announcing it would hold national elections and form a civilian government.
The international community, including the European Union (EU), has been distracted ever since, despite an abundance of information that Burmaâs government has continued to violate human rights on a massive scale. âWait and seeââwhat the government will do before the elections, how the elections will be conducted, whether the new government will make any changesâhas been the prevailing and irresponsible approach.
Meanwhile, the human rights situation in Burma has gone from bad to worse, with no justice for the victims. By the time the election announcement was made, the number of political prisoners in Burma had nearly doubled from its pre-Saffron Revolution number to over 2,100âwhere it remains today. Several months afterwards, the government denied, obstructed and/or confiscated international aid in the wake of Cyclone Nargis, turning the humanitarian disaster into a human rights crisis. And a year later, authorities arrested, tried, and unlawfully extended the house arrest of opposition leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
Among the situations calling out loudest for justice and accountability is Burmaâs ethnic minority regions. Ten months before the November 2010 elections, Amnesty International released a report on the repression of ethnic minority political activists in Burma, which showed that optimism in relation to the polls was being contradicted in the ethnic minority areas.
It followed a mid-2008 publication, Crimes against humanity in eastern Burma, whose relevance has only increased since then. The report focused on the Burmese armyâs human rights violations against ethnic minority Karen civilians on a widespread and systematic basis, which amounted to crimes against humanity. Violations included extrajudicial executions, torture, arbitrary detention, forced labor, confiscation of land and food and forced displacement of the civilian population on a large scale, starting in late 2005.
While this was the first time Amnesty had characterized such violations as crimes against humanity, the reportâs findings were consistent with our research on the country for two decades. The testimonies, collected in several countries since 1987, documented the very same crimes against civilians. They were told to us not only by the Karen, but by many other ethnic minorities as well, including the Rohingya, the Karenni, the Shan and the Mon.
Likewise, accounts since mid-2008, especially since the day of Burmaâs national elections last November, when hostilities were accelerated or renewed between the Burmese army
and armed groups fighting on behalf of several ethnic minorities, recall our reportâs findings: serious human rights violationsâsome of which may amount to crimes against humanity and/or war crimesâagainst ethnic minority Karen, Kachin, and Shan civilians.
These include recent accounts of the army using prison convicts as porters in the fighting in Kayin (Karen) State, forcing them to act as human shields and mine-sweepers and of rape and other sexual violence, primarily in Shan State. Reliable reports indicate that the number of displaced persons there has reached 30,000, while in or near Kachin State 20,000 internally displaced persons were reported at the end of July.
We have waited for years, even decades, and seen quite enough: these violations call for accountability. However, Article 445 of Burmaâs 2008 Constitutionâwhich codifies immunity from prosecution for officials for past violationsâindicates that without international action, this is most unlikely.
In October 2011, the UN special rapporteur will be presenting a report to the UN General Assembly, which will likely adopt a resolution on Burma. The EU will again lead in the drafting of this resolution.
In each of his reports or statements to the UN Human Rights Council and the General Assembly, the special rapporteur has called for greater accountability for grave international crimes in Burma or expressly recommended that the UN establish a Commission of Inquiry into such crimes.
While the question remains as to whether such a Commission would have access to Burma, a similar 1997 Commission by the International Labour Organization compensated for its denial of access partly through expert testimony, which Amnesty among others provided. Two years later, Burma passed a law prohibiting forced labor. Accountability must begin somewhere.
Moreover, accountability need not exclude increased humanitarian assistance and efforts to engage the new government.
Amnesty International welcomes the fact that 12 of the 16 nations that have publicly stated their support for a Commission of Inquiry in Burma are EU members, but regrets that neither the EU as a bloc nor several of its influential membersâincluding Germany, Italy, Spain and Swedenâhave not done so.
After more than three years of âwait and see,â it is time the EU and its member states translate their concern about Burmaâs human rights situation into public support for the establishment of a UN-led Commission of Inquiry into crimes against humanity and other crimes under international law in Burma.
Benjamin Zawacki is Amnesty Internationalâs Burma researcher and a member of the US Council on Foreign Relations.
Friday, September 2, 2011
A petition signed by nearly 1,600 influential Burmese persons, including politicians, journalists, writers, artists and film directors, has been sent to President Thein Sein on Thursday with a campaign message titled âFrom Those who Wish the Irrawaddy to Flow Forever.âThe signatories included: Win Tin, a prominent member of the opposition National League for Democracy; veteran journalists Sein Win and Maung Wun Tha; Kyaw Thu, the founder of the Free Funeral Services Society; writer Than Myint Aung; social activist Aung Thin; the acclaimed writer Zaw Zaw Aung; and film director Cho Tu Zal.
The campaign was organized by Myat Thu, a prominent member of the 88 Generation Students group.
Speaking to The Irrawaddy on Thursday, Myat Thu said, âAlong with the petition we sent a letter that outlined our anxieties.â
The Irrawaddy River is considered the main artery of Burma and million sof people depend on it for their livelihoods. It has its source in Kachin State in northern Burma at the confluence of the Nâmai and Mali rivers, and flows 2,170 km (1,348 mi) through many of the country’s main cities, including Myitkyina, Bhamo, Mandalay, Sagaing, Bagan, Magwe and Pyay, before emptying in the fertile Irrawaddy delta.
But today the river is faced with an unprecedented threat in the form of ongoing dam projects in Kachin State.
Burma’s previous ruling military regime and Chinaâs state-owned Chinese Power Investment Corporation (CPI) agreed to built a megadam at Myitsone, the confluence that acts as the source of the Irrawaddy. If completed, the hydropower dam project will be the 15th largest hydroelectric power station in the world, and will cost an estimated US $3.6 billion.
The length of the dam is to be about 499 ft (152 m), and its height about 499 ft, equivalent to a 50-story building. The surface area of the reservoir is to be 295.8 sq mi (766 sq km), larger than the city state of Singapore.
Environmentalists, activists and politicians have given voice to growing concerns about the fate of this mighty river, but the government is reluctant to take action to stop construction.
Meanwhile, political parties and independent candidates have called on the Supreme Court to take action to save the Irrawaddy River.
âWe send an open letter today,â said Win Cho, an independent candidate. âWe are calling for an official response into the issue of the Irrawaddy River and the Myitsone dam project.â
Win Cho said other signatories included: Bauk Ja from the National Democratic Force; Soe Kyi from Thanlyin Township; Aung Myo Oo from Kyeemyindaing Township; and Min Aung from Botahtaung Township, all in Kachin State.
Friday, 02 September 2011 10:27 Ko Wild
Chiang Mai (Mizzima) â Two talks on peace by a popular Buddhist abbot have been banned by the Burmese Home Ministry. The talks, by Abbot Ashin Pyinnay Thiha, had been approved by the Ministry of Religion.The talks, or sermons, were to be held on Thursday and Friday at Zabuthiri Beikman, a building owned by the Religion Ministry in Mayangon Township in Rangoon.
Popularly known as Shwe Nya Wah, 46, the abbot heads the Kyimyidine Thadu Pariyatti Learning Institute where more than 900 student monks study religious education, and he is the chief executive of the Rangoon Buddha University.
âI had planned to preach on peace, on forgiving each other magnanimously and building peace through negotiations,â Ashin Pyinnay Thiha said. âOn the second night, I planned to preach about people fighting each other. Fighting cannot give any benefit to anyone. Fighting can only create disasters. I planned to preach on these subjects by drawing from Buddhist scriptures. I think they cancelled the talks after learning I wanted to talk on these subjects.â
The abbot said the ministry gave no reason for its decision, but similar cancellations have occurred in the past involving people connected to opposition political forces.
The abbotâs monastery was the site of a gathering of 88-generation students, politicians and members of the literary community for a ceremony on August 23 in memory of the 8888 uprising anniversary. Aung San Suu Kyi attended the gathering.
âThis was alms offered to all monks in a monastery by Buddhist devotees. This was not alms offered to an individual. They offered robes to the monks. They have no reason to object to such offerings,â the abbot said.
The abbotâs sermons enjoy widespread popularity among the people under titles such as âRetribution of Evil Doers,â âThe Power of a Devout Buddhistâ and âDonât Do Unjust Things.â
The government often bans talks by monks who it regards as critics.
The director of the exile-based Human Rights Education Institute of Burma, Aung Myo Min, said, âThey will ban such ceremonies if they could create ill will or insult other religions. But this ceremony wouldnât do that. He would have preached only on peace, harmony and good conduct of the people.â
Friday, 02 September 2011 20:57 Kun Chan
Chiang Mai (Mizzima) â More than 400 refugeesâmostly childrenâin Karenni refugee camp in Mae Hong Song in northern Thailand have been infected by a fever with symptoms similar to dengue fever.Camp health officials said that about two-thirds of the patients are children between the ages of eight and 18, who have high temperatures, coughs and a sore throat. Officials are doing tests now to determine the exact cause of the illness.
If the disease is diagnosed as dengue fever, an infected patient must be separated from other people, the medical official said.
During August, more than 300 refugees received medical treatment at the clinic in Quarter No. 9, and more than 100 received treatment at a clinic in Quarter No. 1.
âMany children who attended school are infected with a virus. When they sneeze, the virus spreads in the air,â a medical worker told Mizzima. Medical officials said that a similar fever outbreak spread through Karenni camp No. 1 in 2009.
Also, starting two weeks ago, an eye disease has infected 102 patients in the camp, said Nga Meh, a clinic health worker.
Meanwhile, health workers distributing information about preventive measures to combat the diseases.
About 15,000 Karenni refugees who fled from the fighting in Burma between government troops and the Karenni National Progressive Party have taken refuge at Karenni camp No. 1.
There are nine refugee camps along the Thai border, including two Karenni camps. Out of more than 145,000 refugees in the camps, about 65,000 were sent to resettlement countries from 2006 to 2010.
Friday, 02 September 2011 21:52 Zwe Khant
New Delhi (Mizzima) â Twelve Burmese working journalists have been added to the Burmese National Press Award committee charged with distributing national-level prizes for the best journalistic work in 2011.A committee member, Maung Wun Tha, said the awards would to given to the highest caliber work that meets the professional standards set by the committee.
âThe state-run media still does not meet our standards,â he said. âThey only report government activities and news that is issued by the government. We will award the prizes for the best news reporting, editorial, feature, cartoon and photograph that meet our standards,â said Maung Wun Tha, a consulting editor with Pyithu Khit (Peopleâs Age).
The National Press Award committee now includes 32 members who have decided on the criteria and standards for the awards, which will be presented in February 2012. Maung Wun Tha said the awards committee members will apply international standards in selecting the winners.
The 12 recently appointed members include working journalists Thiha Thaw from Open News journal; Venus Journal editor-in-chief Dr. Myo Min Htike; Myo Nyunt Maung; Myanmar Post journal executive editor Than Htike Thu; Messenger Journal executive editor Thura Aung; 247 Journal editor-in-chief Myint Swe Myint; Hot News journal editor Hay Mar; Envoy Journal editor Zaw Tun Maung; 7 Day News journal editor Chan Nyein; journalist Aunt Maung; journalist Thar Ban; and cartoonist Ngwe Kyi.
The full committee has proposed 34 writers and journalists to serve as the prize-selection committee that will name the winners independently. The selection committee membersâ names will be announced at a later date.
The National Press Award committee includes members of the Myanmar Writers and Journalists Association, independent journalists and officials from the state Press Scrutiny Board [the censorship board].
Burma media observers say that the Information Ministry uses the state-run media as vehicles for distributing propaganda while ignoring opposing views and opinions. The state-run media includes the New Light of Myanmar (Burmese and English editions), The Mirror, the military- funded Myawaddy Daily, the municipal committee-funded Rangoon City Daily and Mandalay Yadanabon. Prior to publication, all news journals must submit their stories and photographs to the state censorship board which routinely bans information and photographs from distribution.
By Joseph Allchin
Published: 2 September 2011
Burmaâs National Parlaiment or Amyotha Hluttaw approved the creation of a âpeace committeeâ to attempt to solve the countryâs ongoing, and seemingly intractable ethnic conflicts. With sources claiming that opposition icon Aung San Suu Kyi could be included in the commitee.The committee was approved on Wednesday but not made fully public till yesterday. The parliament has not made a final decision on who will be on the committee.
However Dr Aye Maung, chairman of Rakhine Nationalities Development Party (RNDP) and an MP in the National parliament made the suggestion that Aung San Suu Kyi should be included in that committee whilst discussing the formation of the peace committee, said Phone Myat Aung, an MP for the National Democratic Force (NDF) Party.
â[Dr Aye Maung] read out the summery of Daw Aung San Suu Kyiâs letter for peace and suggested the she and other well-respected individuals should be included in the [peace] committee,â said Phone Myint Aung.
He said military representatives in the parliament focused their discussion on a perspective that development only comes after peace.
There has been an apparent warming of relations between the government of Thein Sein and the Nobel Laureate but she will be placed in a difficult position should she be invited to participate in such an official capacity with a government who she and her party have broadly labelled illegitimate;
âParliament just approved the principle of the formation of the peace committee, but it was not clear whether Suu Kyi will be allowed to participate in the committee or even whether Suu Kyi herself wanted to join or not,â said an MP who requested anonymity to Deutsche Press-Agentur.
Suu Kyi met Thein Sein for the first time on the 19 August at an economic forum held in the capital Naypyidaw. She appeared positive after the meeting, offering many hope that reforms and compromise were possible.
However the issue of ethnic conflict is indeed one of the biggest challenges for the government. Fighting has only increased since last yearâs controversial election, with fighting breaking out with groups previously holding a cease fire with Naypyidaw, such as the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and the Shan State Army (SSA).
Suu Kyi could be a shrewd choice, she is regularly labelled as the only Burman politician with any respect amongst the ethnic groups, and would offer the government virtually unimaginable kudos both inside and outside the country.
The government already sent a letter to armed ethnic groups in which it claimed they wanted to offer peace, this was however broadly rejected by members of armed ethnic groups seeing it as lacking sincerity.
âThey already did it years ago, but it did not work. They still send their troops to the ethnic areas; there is still fighting every day and still human rights abuses every day. Their actions have not changed,â Zipporah Sein, General Secretary of the Karen National Union told DVB.
Indeed fighting has only increased with ethnic armed groups alleging a retinue of human rights abuses accompanying government incursions into rebel controlled territory. As a result trust will be hard sought.
By AHUNT PHONE MYAT
Published: 2 September 2011
Dr Nay Zin Latt, a political advisor to the Burmese President, has moved to distance himself from exiled media reports that the government is planning to host a national-level political forum.Reports suggested that politicians and activists from inside and outside the country, including Aung San Suu Kyi would meet in the capital in November.
In response to a report in the exiled Irrawaddy magazine quoting him as the source, Dr Nay Zinn Latt told DVB that;
âIt is not our position to comment on the national-level forum. Maybe there is a group of individuals exclusively discussing on it but how should we know itâs going to be exactly held in a next few months.â
The report suggested that because the economic forum, that saw Aung San Suu Kyi travel to Naypyidaw for the first time, was such a âmedia successâ that a political forum was a likely next step.
The selection of government advisors raised eyebrows with strong academic credentials, Nay Zin Latt for instance has an MBA from Adam University in the United States and a degree in architecture from the Rangoon institute of technology. Most strikingly however was the appointment of U Myint who is noted for being a political moderate, with ties to Aung San Suu Kyi.
The advisors therefore represent at least a nominal opening up of the process of governance in the country, as a result they were seen as a positive step from the government of Thein Sein.
Nay Zin Latt however added that; âMy quote made it look like we are making moves ahead of the government. We are just advisors â we give advice and it is up to the president and the government to decide the procedure. This is not a matter that we can decide,â said Dr Nay Zin Latt.
âI told them [the Irrawaddy] that there will be forums on economics, health and education consecutively but that I havenât heard about a plan for the political forum. Despite this they reported that a political forum will be held âin the near futureâ and thatâs not what I said.â
The senior government advisor is a former military man; he served as a captain with the engineer corps, which he joined in 1981. He is now active as a hotelier with his Ambo Group of Hotels of which he is the chairman. He is also the General Secretary of the Myanmar Hoteliers Association.
Nay Zin Latt cautioned that; âAs we are now in a transition period, one needs to take caution in what one says and the information exchanged. It makes it hard for us to give information [to the media] when facts are exaggerated to make a popular headline news.â
Adding that; âIt would be better if they can compromise and be fair with us. We all have our ethics and it would be better for long term if we can follow the ethics.â
Dr Nay Zin Latt was appointed to the political advisory committee in April, the political section is headed by propaganda specialist, Ko Ko Hlaing. Nay Zin Latt is rumoured to have tutored Information Minister Kyaw Hsan in public speaking.
By NANT BWA BWA PHAN
Published: 2 September 2011
The way the United Nations and most governments act, I sometimes wonder if Karen State is in Burma. Certainly they donât treat us like we are in Burma. There is considerable irony in this. Often the Karen National Union (KNU) is accused of fighting for an independent separate state. In fact we changed our policy towards federalism as far back as 1956, and now support a federal democratic Burma.The international community seems to think we are not part of Burma. That is the only reason I can think of for why they make policy on Burma whilst ignoring what happens in Karen State.
Just look at the recent record. In 2006 the Burmese Army launched a major offensive in Karen State. They deliberately targeted Karen villages, walking miles to avoid the bases of our Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), to deliberately target civilians in this way is a war crime. But not one government said so.
They didnât just attack villages, Burmese Army soldiers raped women, executed and tortured people. Unarmed villagers were thrown alive into their burning homes. People were beheaded and crucified. More than 80,000 people fled their homes, hiding in the jungle. The dictatorship blocked aid, babies died from disease, children went hungry. These are crimes against humanity. We cried out to the United Nations for help. It didnât come.
Later that year, a new UN Envoy, Ibrahim Gambari, went to Burma. We hoped he would persuade the generals to end the attacks and allow aid to reach our people.
But he didnât even mention what was happening. Instead he gave a press conference praising the regime for promising to make reforms. He talked about how they had turned a new page with the international community. He said not one word about the slaughter of my people.
It was the same before, and it has been the same since. In February, 2010, a petition from 84,000 civilians in Karen State was delivered to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. The petition called on Ban Ki-moon to take action to stop the Burmese Army attacking them. It represented a desperate appeal from people who have lived in fear for their whole lives, as have their parents and grandparents before them. Karen communities worldwide also delivered copies of the petition to Presidents and Prime Ministers across the world, calling on them to also take action.
We asked them to use their influence to support Ban Ki-moon to secure a nationwide ceasefire as a top priority, leading to meaningful and inclusive dialogue to achieve genuine national reconciliation and a federal Burma. We also called on them to pressure the regime to enter into dialogue with the Karen National Union, and other ethnic political parties, together with the rest of the democracy movement in Burma.
The response? There wasnât one. No reply.
For so many decades the Karen and other ethnic civilians of Burma have been suffering from various crimes committed by the ruling Burmese government. Every year, tens of thousands of people are forced to flee their homes simply because of the attacks by the Burmese Army, and tens of thousands more are used as slave labour. All this is ignored by the international community, which focuses on events in Rangoon and Naypyidaw.
The shocking behaviour of the UN Envoy back in 2006 is now being repeated on a greater scale. Attacks have increased in Karen State and Shan State, with the dictatorship breaking ceasefire agreements. Burmese Army attacks have spread to Kachin State, as well. The Burmese Army has unleashed its soldiers against civilians, driving a total of around 100,000 from their homes since November. Soldiers gang-rape and execute ethnic women, and use villagers as slave labour and human minesweepers.
Given this appalling and deteriorating situation, you would expect action to install a ceasefire, to get aid to people, and punish the regime for these horrific abuses. At the very least you would expect a grouping like the European Union to be supporting the recommendation of the UNâs own human rights expert on Burma, that a UN Commission of Inquiry be set up to investigate these abuses.
Not only has the EU not supported an Inquiry, it hasnât even commented on the serious increase in abuses taking place. EU governments instead focus on a speech made four months ago by Thein Sein, the new President of Burma. This week, the dictatorship even got praised for not attacking Aung San Suu Kyi when she travelled out of Rangoon. The EU and UN seem happy to wait and see what the ânewâ government does, as if there is no urgency, as if women are being not raped every day, villages burned, people used as slaves.
The Burmese Army can commit war crimes and crimes against humanity in Karen State and other ethnic states, it doesnât seem to matter. The generals know this, which is why they carry on killing. They know all they need to do is make nice speeches in Naypyidaw, and agree to let diplomats visit now and again, they can literally get away with murder. The UN and EU ignore war crimes and crimes against humanity in Karen State, which is just the way the generals like it.
Nant Bwa Bwa Phan is the representative of the Karen National Union in the United Kingdom.
46 comments
áá±á«ááșáá±áŹáș
September 2, 2011 at 9:56 pm
á áááșááŒáœááźáá±áá»áœá±ážááŒáźáž ááœá±ááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááșááá°ááá·áș áĄáááș áá áĄááœááș áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáá áșáŠážááᯠááČá ááŻááșá ááá ááŒáá·áș áááșážááźážáááŻááș ááŒáźááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž
á áááșááŒáœááźáá±áá»áœá±ážááŒáźáž áááșáá áșá áá áșááŻá¶áá»áŹáž áááŻááșáá°áᏠááœá±ááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááșááá°ááá·áș áĄáááș áá áĄááœááș áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáá áșáŠážááᯠááČá ááŻááșá ááá ááŒáá·áș áááșážááźážáááŻááș ááŒáźááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒááșááŒááŻá· áĄááŸááș á ááČá áááșážá០ááááááșá ááŒááșááŒááŻá·ááŸáááœááșáá»á°áᏠáááčááááŻááș áá»á±áŹááșážáá° áá áșáŠážááᯠáá±áŹááșá»áŹážá áááșáá±á«ááșáá± áá° áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáá áșáŠážá ááźáá±áá»áœá±ážáᏠáĄáá»ááá»áœááșááŒáźáž áááșáá áș á áá áșááŻá¶ áááŻááș áá°ááŒááșážááŒá áșááŒáźáž áááșážááŹááșááŻá¶áá»áŹážááᯠáĄááșááŹáááșáá±á«áșáááșáááșáᯠááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááș ááŒáźážááœá±áĄááŒáááșááŒáááș áá±áŹááșážáᶠááČá·áᏠá áŻá áŻáá±á«ááșáž áá»ááșááááșáž á áá ááá·áș áá±ážááČá·áááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŹáž áááŻááŸáá·áș ááźážá ááșáá°áá áșáŠážáááŒá±áŹáááșá
âáĄá ááá±áŹá· ááá áá°ážáá±á«á·á áá±áŹááșá០áá°á áĄáá±á«áșááᯠááœáá·áșááŒá±áŹ áááŻááșáá±áŹá·ááŒá áșáááșáĄááŻááșážááŻá¶ážáááጠááááșááá«ááČá·ááČá áááșážááᯠá©ááŻááșá áá áááșáá±á· á áááŻááșááŒáŹážáááŻááș ááááșâ áᯠáááșážá áááșááźááŻááșáž ááŒáá·áș áááșááœááșááŒá±áŹáááșá áááșáž ááá áčá ááŸáá·áșáááșáááșá áá±á«áșááŒá°ááŹááá°ážá áș áá»áŹáááșá០ááŒááșááŒááŻá· ááŸá áĄááŸááș á ááČá áááșážáááŻá· áááș ááœááș áá±ážááŒááșážááČá·áᏠááŹáááșááŸááá°áá áșáŠážá âááźáĄááŸáŻááŒá áșáᏠááŻááșáá«áááșá áááŹážáá¶áááŻá· áá°ááááČá· áá°áááŻáááșáž áááșážááááŹážáá«áááșá áááŹážááŻá¶ážááᯠáĄááŒááșááŻá¶ážáááșáááŻá·áááŻááșáááŻá·áĄááœááș á áźá ááșáá±áá« áááșâáᯠááŒááșáááș ááŒá±ááŒáŹážááČá·áááșá áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá· á ááșážáá»á±áŹááșážáá± áááŹážáá¶áᯠáá°áááá° áĄáá»ááŻážáááźáž áááșá ááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááșá ááá°ááŹáž áá±áŹ ááœá±á áŻá áŻáá±á«ááșáž ááááșáž á á ááŸáá·áș áááșááŻááșáááŻážááááșááŸáááŻááșááá±áž ááá·áș ááœá±áá»ááș áá ááááșážáááŻá· áĄáá«áĄáááș ááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááș á áááŹáž áá±áŹááœá±ááŒáá·áș áááșáááșáá°ááŹážááá·áș áááșáááșáááᏠáá»ááșááááșáž áá ááá·áșáááŻá·áááŻáááŹáž ááᯠáá»á±áŹááșážáá° á ááŸááșááŻá¶áááșááŸáá·áșáĄáá° ááááșážáááșáž ááá ááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșážááᯠááŒááșááŒááŻá·áĄááŸááș (á) ááČá áááșážá០á áááșážááŸá°ážáŠážáá±áŹáșááœááșááŸáá·áș áĄááŸáŻá á áșááČáĄáŻááșáŠážáá±áŹáșááŸááŻááșááœááșáž áááŻá·áá¶á០ááááááșá
âááŒááșááŒááŻá·á ááœá±áŠážáá¶á·áá±áŹáș áĄáá±áŹááșááŸáŹ áááșážáááááșá áá°ááČá·áĄ áá°áááșáááŻááșááŻááșážáááŻáá« ááááșážáááșážáá áá«áááșá áĄáČááźáĄááČááŸáŹ áĄááŒáŹážááááșáž ááá±ážááœá±ááČá· áááșáá áșá áá áșááŻá¶ ááœá±áááŻáá« ááœá±á·ááČá·ááá«áááșâ áᯠááČáá°ážáááŻááșážáá±áááŒáźážá០ááČáĄáŻááșáŠážá ááŻážáááșáž áááŒá±áŹáááșá áááŹážááᯠááœááșáá»á°ááŹáááčá áááŻááșáá»á±áŹááșážáá°áááș áááá ááŒáá·áș ááŸá áșá©ááŻááșá áá áááșáá±á·ááŸá á áááá ááŻááŸá áșáĄáá á áŻá áŻáá±á«ááșážááœá±ááááșáž á áá ááá·áșááᯠáááŹážáá¶ááŻáá°áááá° áá¶áĄááŒáááș ááŒáááșáá±ážáĄááșááČá·áááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŻááœá±áá»áŹážááᯠááŒááșááŒááŻá·ááŸá áááŻážááááșá០áááșááŻááșáááŻá·ááœáŸáČááŒá±áŹááșážááČá·áááá·áșáĄááŒááș ááŸááșááŻá¶áááșáááŻáá« áá±ážááŹážááČá·áááŒá±áŹááșáž áĄáááșááŸáááźáž áá¶áá±ááčááŹáĄááœááșážá០á áááșááŸáá·áș ááœáŸá±áá»áŹážáĄááŻááșááŻá¶ážááᯠSURE ááŹáž ááŒáá·áșáááŻážááŻááșáá°ááČá·áááș áĄááŒááșáááŻááș ááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááșááŹáááŒáá·áș ááœáá·áșááŒá±áŹá០áĄááŻá¶ážá áŻá¶ááááČá·áááŒáźáž ááČá áááșážáááŻá·áááŻááș ááŒáŹážááČá·áááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŹážáááŻááŸáá·áșááźážá ááș áá°áááŒá±áŹ áááșá
áááŹážáááŻááŸáá·áș áááŹážáá¶ááŻáá° áááá° áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáááŻá·áááș áááá áááșáááœááș ááááșááœá±ááŒá áșááČá·ááŒááŒáźáž áááá áá°áááŻááșáááœááș áááŹážáá¶ááŻáá° áááá° áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáááș ááŒááșááŒááŻá·áááŻá· áá±áŹááșááŸáááŹáᏠáĄáááșááŸáŹážáá±áááŻááș ááŒáźážáá±áŹááș áĄáááŻáá« áĄáááșááááŹážááᯠáĄáŹážá áááșáááŻáá±á·ááŒá±áŹá á±áá±áŹ ááźáá± áá»áœá±ážáᏠáĄáááș áá»áŹážáá»áœááșááá«ááșááŻá¶ áááŻááșáá°ááČá·áááșááááŻá·áá±áŹááș ááŹááșááŻá¶ááᯠáĄááșááŹáááșáááș áááșááŻááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááș ááŹááœá±ááŸá áșááČá·áááșáᯠáááŹážáááŻááŸáá·áș ááźážá ááșáá°áááŒá±áŹáááșá áááŹážááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșááŸá±á·áá± áŠážáááŻááźá០áĄáááŻáá«áĄááŸáŻááŒá áșá ááșááŸáá·áșáááș áááșá âáá«á ááá±áŹááșážááČá·ááŻááșáááș áá áșááŻááČá áááŻáááŻážááŹá ááŹááșááŻá¶ááŒááŒáźáž ááœá±ááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááșáᏠáááŻáá±áŹá· áá±áŹáșáá±áŹáșáĄá±áŹááșáááșáž áá»áááș ááááșážááá±ážáá áșáá±áŹááș áááááșáž ááŻá¶ážááœáŹážáááŻááșááČá· áĄááŸáŻáá áșááŻááŒá áșááČá· áĄááœááșáá±áŹááșáá°ááœá± áááșá ááŻááșáááŻááșáĄá±áŹááș áááá±áŹááșááČá· ááŒá áșáááșáá» ááŸááșááá·áșáááșâáᯠááŒá±áŹááá·áșááááșážáĄáŹáž POPULAR JOURNAL ááœááșáá±áŹáșááŒáá«ááŸááááș.á
Source:http://myatlayngon.blogspot.com/2011/09/blog-post_8991.html
kai
September 3, 2011 at 4:10 am
http://www.screenjunkies.com/movies/actors-directors/5-myanmar-celebrities-who-call-asia-their-home/
5 Myanmar Celebrities Who Call Asia Their Home
About 9 hours ago by Irving Oala
Myanmar celebrities are not very well-known, as Myanmar itself is not terribly well-known in the world. This small Asian country produces some talent in the entertainment industry however, ranging from writers to actors to models to musicians, who make their living entertaining people, giving them a celebrity status, at least in the country of Myanmar. The following list is of a number of Myanmar celebrities who have either made news for their work or may make more news and become more popular in the future.
1. San Yati Moe Myint
2. Par Ya Ku
3. Rzarni
4. Chan Chan
5. Adrian Zaw
etone
September 13, 2011 at 9:04 am
áĄáČá·ááźáá±áŹááșááá±ážá ááŻá¶ááČááŸáŹáᏠááœááșááœááșáá±ážááŒá áșáá±áᏠ… áĄááŒááșááŸáŹ ááŻááŻá¶ážááŻá¶ážáá±áž áááá
đ
áááŻááșáááșáá»á±áŹáșááźáĄá±áŹááșááŻ
September 3, 2011 at 9:45 am
áá áșáá±áŹááŻááșážááá±áŹá· ááááșááŒá±áŹááșáááčáááĄááœáČá·á áá±áááșáá¶áááșááŹáááșáááŻááŒáźáž
ááŒááșáááááșážáááŻááșááœá±ááᯠááŒááșááŹááŒááșáááșážá ááŒááșááŒáá·áșáááŻá·ááá±ááŒáááșáááŻá·áááŻááŹááá±
ááŻáá±áŹá·áááá±áŹá·áá°ážáááŻááŒááșááŒáź
áááŻáá±áŹá·áᏠááŻá¶ážá á¶áĄáááŻááșáž ááŒáŻá¶áááșáá±áŹá· áááșáá±áŹá·ááŒáźážáááșáá±ážááá±ážááŹá
ááźáá±ááŹááŸáŹááŒáŻá¶áááŻá·ááŒá±áŹááááș
ááŒááșááœááșážááááșážááČááŒá áșááŒá áș ááŒááșáááááșážááČááŒá áșááŒá áș ááááșážáááŻááŹáᏠááááșážáá«ááČ
ááááșážáááŻááŹáᏠááááčááŹááșáá±áŹááșááŒá±áŹááșážáááŹážáááŻááșáá«áá°áž ( áá°ááŹáááșááœá±ááœááș )
áá«á·ááŒá±áŹáá·áș áá áșáá«áá áșáá± ááááșážááČá· áá°áááșážáááŻá·á áșáááŻá·áá±á«áșáááŹáž áĄáČá·áá«á áá°áá±ááá·áș
ááŒááșááœááșážááŒááșá ááááșážááœá±ááČá· áĄáá±ážáĄááŹážááœá±ááČá· áĄáŹáá±áŹáșááœá±ááČá· ááœáČááŒáŹážááŒáŹážááŹážáá»ááșááœá±áááá°áá«áá°áž
áááșáá»áŹážáááŻá·ááᯠáááŹááŸááșááœá± áĄáá±ááČá· áá±á·ááŹáááșááŒáááșáááŻáááș áĄáá»ááŻážááŒáźážáááșáááșážáááșáááá«áááș
áááŻááŒááșááŹá ááááșážááœá±áá±á«áșááŸáŹ áá±áááșááŒáá« ááŻá¶ážáááșááŒáá«áááŻá· ááŒá±áŹááŒááșááŹáá«
ááŹážáááᯠááŸá áșáááșááŹážáááșááČá·áá áá±áŹáááŻááŒá±áŹááŹáá«
áá«ááá±áŹá· áááŹááŻááșááŹáá±á«á·áá»áŹ đ
……………………………………………………..
ááŒááșááŹá á áșáááșáá»áŹážáĄáŹážááŻá¶ážááźážáá«áž ááŸá±á·áááșážááœááșááá±áŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș áááźážáááŹážáá»áŹáž áááșážá á±áŹáá·áșá
ááŒáŹáááá±ážáá±á·á á ááșáááșááŹá 01 áááș 2011 ááŻááŸá áș áá»áŸááșážáá¶áá±áŹáșááá·áș ááááșáž – áá»áŸááșážáá¶áá±áŹáșááá·áșááááșáž
áááŻááșážáááșážááŹážáááșáááșáááŻááșáááșááœáČá·áá»áŹážáĄáŹáž ááŒááșáᏠá á áșáááșáááŻážá á áșáááșáááŻááșáááŻááșáá±áᏠáá»áŸááșážááŒááșááŸá ááŒááŻá·áááșáĄáá»ááŻá·áááŻá·á áááșá á±áŹáá·áșáááŸáááŒáá±áŹá·ááČáá±áŹááș áááșážáá»ááș á á áșááŹážááááŹážá áŻáá»áŹážáááŒááșáá°á·á á áșáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áĄáá° áĄááŸáá·áșáá» áááșážá á±áŹáá·áșááááșáᯠáá»áŸááșážááŒááș ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááșáž ááááșážáááșááœááșááááŻáá«áááșá
â áá±áŹááșáá»ááŻá áá»á±áŹááșááČá áááŻážááááș á áááșááœá± ááá»ááșáááș áááșáááŻááșááŹááČ ááŸááááșá ááá·áșáááŻááșážáááșáááșáž ááŹááČ ááŸááááșá áááŻáá±áŹá· áááșááŻá¶ááŒáŻá¶áá±áž áááŸááá±áŹá·áá°ážá á á áșááŹážáááŹážá ááŹážáááźážááœá± ááČá·ááŒááșáá°á·á á áșááœá± áĄááŸáá·áșáá» á á±áŹáá·áșá áá±áŹá·áᏠáá±á«á·â áᯠáĄáááșááá±á«áșáááŻááá·áș áááșááááŹážáááșááŠážáááŒá±áŹáááșá
áááŻáááŻá· ááááșááŻá¶ážááźážáá«áž ááŸá±á·áááșážááœááșáá±ááááșááŸáŹ áááčááá±áž – ááŹážááŸááŻážááŹážáááșáž ááá»áŸá±áŹááșááŸá ááŒááșáᏠáááșáááșážáá»áŹáž ááŒá áș ááŒáźáž áĄáá»ááŻá·áááșáá»áŹážááŸáŹ ááááŻááșážáááșááœááșážá ááĄáááșááČááŒáááșáĄááááŸááá±ááŒá±áŹááșáž áĄáááŻáá«ááŻááčáááŻááșá ááŒá±áŹáááșá
âáá»á±áŹááșááČ ááá á ááá á áá á áááŻážááááș ááá áááá ááá áááá ááá áááŻá·áááŻáááș á á áșááŹážáááŹážááœá± áááșážá á±áŹáá·áș áá±ááŒáᏠááœá±á·ááááșá ááŒááș áá°á· á á áșááœá±ááČá· áĄááŸáá·áșáá» á á±áŹáá·áșááŒáááșá
áááŻážááááșááááșááœá±áááŻáááș áĄáČá·ááź á á áșááŹážáááŹážááœá± áááșááČááŸáŹ ááĄáááșááČááŒáá°ážá ááŻááșáž ááŒáźážáá»á±áŹááșážááœá±á áááșááŹáááșááŹáĄáááșááœá±ááŸáŹááœáŹážáĄáááșáጠáááșá áĄáááșáĄáááá·áșááŒá±áŹáá·áșáᏠáá°áááŻá· áááșážá á±áŹáá·áșááᏠááááșáá±áŹá· áá°áááŻá·ááČ áá±áááșááá áș áááșáá°ážá á á áșááŹážáááŹážááá»ááŻá· ááŹáááŻááșááŒáźážááŒá±áŹ áá±ááŒáááșá ááááșáááŻá· áááșáá°ááŹáááșáá±áŹá·áááźááŸááșááŹážáá±ážááŻá¶ááČááŸá áá±áŹá·áááșáááŻááŒáźážáá±áŹá·áá±á«á·â áᯠáááșážá áá»áŸááșážáá¶áá±áŹáșááá·áșáĄáŹáž ááŒá±áŹááŒáááșá
áĄáááŻáá«áááșáá»áŹážááŸáŹ áĄáá»áŹážáĄáŹážááŒáá·áș ááá»ááș áá±áĄááŻááșáĄá± áááșáĄáŹáž áááŻážá á áșáááșáá±áááá·áșáááșáá»áŹážááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșážá áá ááșá áááŻááșáž áááșááœááșážá áá±ááČáá°áááŸáá áááșááŒáźážáá±áŹááșážáá±áŹááșážáᏠáá»ááșáá±ááŒá±áŹááșáž áá±ááá¶áá»áŹážáá¶ááŸááŒáŹáž ááááááșá
ááŸá±á·áááșážáááș á á áșááŹážáá»áŹážááŸáŹ áá±ááŒá±ááŒáááșááŸáŹáá»áŹážááŒáŹážáááŒáá·áș ááŸá±á·áááșáž áááœááșááŸáź ááŸáŻááșáááșááœáČááá±áŹ áá»ááŻáž ááááŹážá áŻáááș áááŻááșáá±ážááŒá±áŹááșážá ááŸá±á·áááșážá á áșáá»ááșááŸáŹááœááșááŹááœááșáááșáž ááááŹážá áŻáááșáá»áŹážá ááœáŸá±ááź – á§ááŹáááź ááŒá áșááŻá¶áĄáá ááœáŹážáá±áŹááșáááŻá· áá±áŹááșááŒááŒá±áŹááșáž áááčááá±ážáá±áŹááș áááŻážááááșá០áááčááááŻááșáá»á±áŹááșážáá° ááŠážá áááșáž ááŒá±áŹáááșá
â á á áșááŹážáááŹážááœá±ááČ áááŹážá ááŹáá±áŹá·áá±áŹááșážáááșá áá»ááșáááșááČá· áá»ááșááœááșá áááŻáá·áșáá±áŹááșá»áŹážááŸá±á·áááșáž áá«ááœáŹáž áááș áá±áááșáááŻá· ááááááŒáźážááČá· áĄáááșáĄáááá·áșáááŻáááœááșáááșááČáá°ážáá±áŹáșá ááááșáá±áŹá·áááșááČááŸáŹ áá±ááŹá áŹážáááș áá±áá±áž áĄáČáá±áŹááș áá»ááșážáá»ááș áááșážááČáá±ááŹâ áᯠááá»ááááșááČ ááŒá±áŹááŒáááșá
ááŸá±á·áááșážá á áșáá»ááșááŸáŹá áááááŒááș ááááŒááș áá±ááá·áșáĄá áŹáž ááŹážáááŹážááŸá±á·ááááșáĄáá±áá¶áá±áŹá·áááșáᯠáááŻáᏠááá ááá áááșá áááááááŻááșáááŻááș áááșáá±ááá·áș á á áșáááŻááșááŠážáááșáž ááŸáááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž áĄáááŻáá« áá»á±áŹááșážáá°á ááŒá±áŹáááșá
âáááŻááșážáááșážááŹážááœá±áĄáá±á«áș áááŻááșáááŻááșážááŹáá±áŹá· áááŻááșáááŻááșážááŹáá±á«á·á ááááșáá±áŹá· áá»á±áŹááșážááŹážááá±áŹááș áĄáá±ááČá· ááŒáá·áșáááș ááŒááŻá·áá±á«áșááá°ááá±áŹááșáĄáá±ááČá·ááŒáá·áșáááșáá±áŹá· áĄá±áŹááșááŒá±áááșááŹážáĄááá·áșááœá±áᏠáĄáááșážáááŻáááŹáž á ááŹáá±áŹááșážáá« áááșá áá°áááŻá·áĄááŹááŸáá áááșážáá»áŸá±áŹááșáááŻáááșááČ áááșáá±áŹááșááČáá±á áá±áŹááșážáá±áá«á á± ááŒá±áá»ááș áá»áŸá±áŹááșáááŹááČá áá°áááŻá· áĄááŹááŸá ááááșážáá áŹáž ááŒáźážááá»ááșáž áááșáá±áŹááș ááŹáᏠáá°áááŻá· áá áŹážááá°ážá áááșážá á±áŹáá·áșáá± ááááșá áá°áááŻá· ááá·áșáá»ááșáááŻááșáá«áááș ááČá·ááŹáĄáá»ááŻážáĄááŒááșááŸááááČ áĄáááș áĄáááá·áșáááŻááșááŹáá±ááŹáááŻááááŻáĄá¶á·á© á áᏠáá±áŹááșážááŹâ – ááŻáááșáž áááșážá ááŒá±áŹáááșá
áá»áŸááșážááŒááșá áá»áŸááșážááŒááșáááșááá±áŹáșáĄáŹáž ááŒááșááŹá á áșáááșá áááŻážá á áșáááșáááŻááșáááŻááșáá±áááșááŸáŹ á ááá»á±áŹáșááŒáŹááŒáź ááŒá áșáᏠááŒááșááŹá á áșáááșáááșá áá±ááŒá±áááșááŹááá»áŹážááŒáŹážáááŒáá·áș ááŸá±á·áááșážáááșááČáá±áŹáșááŸáá·áșáĄááŹááŸááĄáá»áŹážá áŻááŸáŹ á áááșáá«ááșáá»áá±áጠááŒá±áŹááșážáááșáž áááșááŸáá·áșáááșážááŸáźážáááșááœááșáááŻááșáá° ááŻááșáááșáá»áŹážááŒá±áŹááŒáá»ááșáĄáááááááșá áĄááŹážáá° áá»áœááșááĄá á±áŹáááŻááșážá á áááșááČá·ááá·áșááá»ááșááŒááșá á áșáá»ááșááŸáŹááœááșážáááșážáĄá ááŻážááááșáááșáĄáá»áŹáž áĄááŒáŹáž áá±ááŻá¶ážáááșáᯠááá»ááșááááșážáááșááœááșá ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
http://burmese.bnionline.net/news/shan/8228-2011-09-01-14-40-26.html
áááŻááșáááșáá»á±áŹáșááźáĄá±áŹááșááŻ
September 4, 2011 at 4:29 pm
ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážá ᏠáááșááŻááșááŸáŹ á áŹážáááŻááșááŒáź
ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹáž áááŻáááș áá°ááœá±á á áááșáááșá áŹážááŒáááșá áĄáá°áááŒáá·áș ááŒááșááŹááœá±áááșáž á áááșáááșá áŹážááŹááČá ááœááșááČá·ááČá· áá ááŸá áșá ááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŸáŹááŹááŒáźáž áá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹáž áááčáááááŻááŻááșááŒá¶áááŻá· ááŻá¶ážááœáČááœáŹážááŹáááŻážá ááŻáá±ááșááᯠá á áșáááŒá áșááŒáááŹáž ááááá°ážá ááŒá±áŹááŹááŒá±áŹáᏠá á áșáĄá ááŻážáá ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážááČá· áááŹážáááș áá±áŹááșážáááșááŸáŻ ááááČ áá°áááœáŹážááŒáźáž áĄááŒáźážááŸáá·áșááŒááŒáźáž ááŒááșáá±á«ááșážááŻááșááČá·áááșá ááŻáá±áŹá· áĄáááșáĄáᶠááŒááșáá±áŹááșážáá±ááŒáźáá±á«á·á
ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážááČá· áááááŻá¶áž á áŹážáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáááŻáá±áŹááș áááșááŻááșááŸáŹ ááœáá·áșáááŻááșááŒáźá âááŒáŻá¶áááșáž áá±áŹáșáááŻâ ááČá·á
ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážáᏠáĄáááŻážáááŹá· ááááșáá±á«ááș áááșááșáá»áŻá¶áĄáźááș áĄáŻááșáá»áŻááșáá±ááČá· áááŻááșáá¶á ááŒááșáá°ááœá±ááᯠáĄáááșááŹážááŒáźáž á á áșáá±ážáá»áČá·ááœááșáá±ááČá· áááŻááșáá¶á áĄáááșááźážáá»ááșážáááŻááșáá¶ááœá±ááᯠáááșá ááŒáźáž áá»á°áááŻááșáááŻááșáááŻá· ááŒááŻážá áŹážáá±ááČá· áááŻááșáá¶á á áááșááááșáááș ááááșáááᯠááœá±á ááșáá»ááŻážáááș áááșááČá·áááŻááșáᶠáááŻáᏠááźááźááŹááœá±ááŸáŹ ááŻá¶ááŸááș ááŒááșáá±áááŹááœá±áá«á
ááá±áŹá áá±áŹáșáá± Utoya ááŸáŹ áĄá áŻáááŻááș áĄááŒáŻá¶áááŻááș áá°áááșááŸáŻ ááŒá áșááŻááșážá áá±áŹáșáá±áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáá±áž áááșááŒáźážá áááșáá»á±ážááŸáŻá áŻá¶áá«áááᯠáááșááá¶áááŻááșáááș ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážááŸáŹ ááœáŹážáá±áá»á± áááŻá· ááŸááșáá»ááșáá±ážáá°ážáá«áááșá
ááá±áŹááááșáž ááŻááșááŸááșá áźážááźážáááŻááŸáŹ áááșááŻááș ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážááŻá¶ážááœáČááŸáŻ ááŹááșáááșáááșáž ááá·áșáááŻááșáááșáááŻá· ááŒáŹážáá°ážáá«áááșá
ááŹááŒá áșááŒá áș ááááááșááČá·á áá»áŸááŻá·ááŸááșááČá· ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážááá±áŹá· áááșááŻááșááŸáŹ á áŹážáá±áŹááșáááŻááșááœáá·áșáááŻááșáá«ááŒáźá ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹáž áá¶ááŻá¶ážá áá±áŹááșááœááșá ááœáá·áșáááșáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá
á á áșáá±áŹááșááŸááșážáá±ážáĄááŒáźážáĄááČ áááŻááșáá»áŻááșááŒáźážáááșááœáá·áșáááșáááșááááșážá ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážá ááźááᯠááœáá·áșáá»ááșáá±ááŹáááŻá· áááŻááșááŸá°ážáá±áŹááșáž áŠážáĄá±áŹááșáááșážááœááșááá±áŹá· ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
ááŒááșááŹááČá· ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážáĄáá±áž áá±á·ááŹáá° áá áčá áᏠááŹáá±ážááșáá áșáááŹááááșáž ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹáž á áŹážáá±áŹááșáááŻááșááœá± áĄáŹááŸááŸáŹ ááœáá·áșááŹááŹááᯠáá±áŹááșážáá«áž áá áșááŻááșáá±ážáá°ážáᏠáááááááá«áááșá
ááááșážáĄááŒáá·áșáĄá áŻá¶ááᯠááźááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŹáááŻááČá· ááźááŸáŹ áĄááșáčáááááșááᯠáááșáá«á
http://www.irrawaddyblog.com/2011/09/blog-post_7819.html
………………………….
ááźážááœááșá ááșážááœáŹážáá±ážá áá áșáá±áŹáșáá±áŹááșáá±ááČá·áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșááČá·áá°áá«ááĄá áá°ážááŻááčáááźááááșážááŒáŻá¶áááșážááŒáᯠá·ááŸáŹ áá±ááŒááșáá±áŹáșáá±áŹáșáááș áááŻááČá·ááŹáááșááČá· (á áŹáž)áá±áŹááșáááŻááș áá«ááŸáááŻááș áĄááŸáááșáááșážááœáŹážááœáá·áșááá·áșááŹáá±á«á·á ááŒáá·áșááŒááșáá±áŹáá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááșááŒáźáž áááșááșááááŻááșáá¶á·ááŹáááșááœá±ááᯠáá±á·áááĄáŹážáááșážáá±áŹááșáá±ááááŻá· áĄáá±áŹááșážáááá±áááŻá·á :-p
………………………………….
ááŸá±á·áĄááŒááșááŸáŹ á áŹážáá±áŹááșáááŻááșááœá±ááœáá·áșááŹážáááș á
áá±áŹááșááœááșááŸáŹ áá±áŹááșááŒáŹáááșááœá±ááČá·ááŸáŻááșááŸáŹážáááș á áááá»áŸ á áźážááœáŹážáá±áž áááŻááșáá¶áá±ážáá°ááŸáŻáá±ážááááșážááœá±ááá°áááș á áá°áááŻá·áááŻááșáá¶ááŒááșáááŻá·áááș á áááŻááșáá¶áááŹááááșááœááșáá±ááČá·áá°ááœá±áááŻáá±áŹááșááŸááșážáááș á áĄáááșáá¶á áŹážáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáá±áŹááșááŸááșážáá±áž á ááŒááșááŹá á áșáĄá ááŻážááááČ áá«áá»ááŻážááœá±áĄáá»áŹážááŒáźážááŻááșááČá· ááŻááșááČáá« . áá±áŹááșááŸááșážáá±ážáá»á±áŹáá±áŹááșáá±áŹááșáá¶ááŒáŻ áááșáááșáááșáááŻááș á ááźááŹáááŻááș á áĄááŸáááșáááșáž á ááŹááŹáĄááŻáá±áááșáž á – Ꮰáááșážáá áááŻá· ááČ á ááŹááŸáá±áŹá· áĄáá°ážáááșážááŒáźážáá±áŹá·áááŻááșáá«áá°áž á
áááŻááșáááșáá»á±áŹáșááźáĄá±áŹááșááŻ
September 4, 2011 at 4:33 pm
áááșážáááș áááșážáá±áŹááᯠᷠáá±á ááșáááŻááșáŠážáááșááŹáž
ááŹáááșááŹááș
âááŻááșážâ áááČ ááŒááșáá¶ááČá·áĄáá° ááČáá»ááœáŹážááČá· áááșážáááșá áĄááá·áșáááŒáŹáž áĄá±áŹáșááŒááșáá»á¶ááŒá±ážááČá· ááŸááșááœá±á ááŸááá·áșáááșááŹááČá· ááŻááșááŻá¶ážááŒáźážááœá±ááᯠá áááșáááŹááᏠáá±ážááŒáá·áșááŒáźáž áŠážáááșáጠááá±áŹááș áááșááŒááșážááŸááșááŒáźáž áá»áááșáž ..
âáá°áž ⊠áááșážáááșááœá±áááșáž áá±áŹáșáá±áŹáșáá»áŹážáá»áŹáž ááŻááșáá«ááŒáźá ááĄáŻá¶ážáĄáŻá¶ážááČá· ááŸáČáá±ááŒáá±áŹá·ááŹááČâ áááŻá· áá¶áááșááŒá°ááŒá°áááŻá·ááŒáŹážááá± ááá°ážáá á áźážáá»ááŹááČá· áá»áœá±ážááœá±ááᯠáááșááœááșážááœááșážááŻáá«áááŻááČá· ááŻááșááŒáźáž áááșážááœáŹážáááŻááșáá«áááșá
ááŒááșááŹááŒááșáĄáááșáááŻááșáž áĄáááșáĄááŹáá±á áááœá±ážáááŻááșážá áááșážáá»ááșáá±á«ááČá· áááŻááčáá°ááááŻááș ááŒááŻááșáá±áááČá· áááșážáá±áŹááœá±ááŹážá ááá±áŹááșážáááșááááșáĄá±áŹááșá áááșážáááșááœá±ááČá· áá±áŹááșááŻááșááŹážááČá· áá°á·ááČáá±ážááČá·áĄááœááșážáááșá áá»áŹááŒááșážááá»ááșáá±á«áș áááșáááșáááșáááș áá±á«ááșááŹážááČá· áĄáá±áŹááșáááœááșáá±áŹá·ááČá· áĄááŹá á±áŹááșááœááșážááœááșážá áá±á«ááșážáĄáŻá¶ážáááșážáá áșáá áșááČá· áĄáááșááŹááČá· áá»ááșááŸáŹáá»ááșážáááŻááșá áááșážáá»ááșáááŻáá±ážááŸáŹáá±áŹá· áá°á·ááČá· áááźážáááșáᏠáá±áŹááșážáááá»á±áŹááșážááČá· ááœáŸá±áááșážá áá»áœá±ážáááŻá¶ážááŻá¶ážááČá· áĄááŻááșááœá±ááŸáŻááșáá±áá«áááșá
âáááŻáž ááá áá ááŻááŸá áșáá±áŹááșáááČá·á áŹáááș áĄáááșááœá±á áá±áŹáșáá±áŹáșáááșážááœáŹážááŒáźá áá±áŹááșááᯠáááșážáááșáá±áŹááș ááŸááá«á·áŠážáááŹážááČâ áááŻá· áá°á áááșážáá«áááșá
áá°áááșážáá±áááČá· áĄááŒá±áŹááșážáááșážááá±áŹá· áá°áááŻá·áá±áááááŻááșá áááșážáá±áŹáááŻááșááœá±áᏠáááșážáááșááœá±ááᯠááŻááșááŒáźážáá±áŹááșážááŹááœá± áááŒááșážááŒááșáž áá»áŹážááŹááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áșáá«ááČá
ááœááșááČá·ááČá· ááŸá áș á á áááșážáá»ááșááŻááșážááŸáŹáá±áŹá· ááŹáá§áááŸáŹ áááșážáááș áĄáááșážááŻá¶áž áá áááșááá± ááá áá áĄáá ááŸááá±ááŹááá± áĄááŻáááŻáááș á áááșááá± ááá áá áá±áŹááșáĄááááČ áĄáá»áŹážááŻá¶áž ááŸááá±áŹá·áááșáááŻá· áá°á áááŻáá«áááșá
ááźáááŻááŻááșáá±ááŒááČá· áĄááá áĄááŒá±áŹááșážáááșážááá±áŹá· áááșáž áááŻáĄááșááŸáŻáá»áŹážáá±ááŹáááșá áááșážáááșááŻááșáááșážááᯠáá°áááșááœá± á áááșáááșá áŹážááŸáŻ áááșážááŹááŹááœá±ááŒá±áŹáá·áșáááŻá· áá°á áááŻáá«áááșá
áááșážáá»ááșáĄá áŹáž ááŒá¶áááŹááᯠáĄá áŹážáááŻážááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș áááșážáá»ááșáĄááŻá¶ážáááșážááŹááŒáááșá áááșážáá»ááșááŒááŻááŹááŸáŹ ááŻááșáá»ááČá·á ááááșááČá· ááŒááșáááČá·ááœá± áááŹááááŒá áșááŒáźáž áááșážáá»ááșáááŻááœá± á áźážááœáŹážáá±ážáá»áááșážááááș
áááŻááŹááááșáž áá±áŹááááșá áá±áŹááááș ááŻááșáá±ááŒáááČá·áĄááŒá±áŹááșážáááșážáááŻáá«ááČ ááČá·á
áááșážáááŹážááœá±ááČá· ááááŻááŸááááșážá áœáČáááááŻá áááșážááČááœááșážáá«ážááŒááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș á áźážááœáŹážáááŻážáááșáááŻá· áááșážáááșááœá±á áááșážáá±áŹááœá±ááᯠá áœáá·áșááœáŹááŒáźáž áááșááŻááșá áááčááá±áž á ááČá·ááŒááŻá·ááŒáźážááœá±á áá»á±áŹááșáá°ážááČá·áá±ááŹááœá±áĄááŒááș
ááá±ážááŸáŹážááᯠáááŻááșáá¶ááœá±áĄáá ááœáŹážáá±áŹááșá áœáá·áșá áŹáž áĄááŻááșááŻááșááŒáᏠáááŸá áșáááșáááŸá áș áá»áŹážááŹáááŻá· áááșážáá±áŹááŸáŹ áááșážáááșááá·áșáá°áááșááœá± áááŸááá±áŹá·áá°ážáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá
áá°á âáááșážááœá±ááŸáŹážáááș áááŻááŹáááșáá± áááșážáá»ááșá áá±ážááá±áŹááșážáá±áŹá·á áá°áááșááœá±á áááșážááááșááČááČá· ááá±ážááŸáŹážááœáŹážááŒáᏠáá»áŹážááŹááŹá áááșáááșááŹáᏠáááșážáááșááá·áș áá°áááșááœá±á áááŸááá±áŹá· áĄáČá·ááźááŸáŹáááș áááșážáááșá áĄáááŻááœá±ááŒá áșáá±ááŒáźážáá±áŹá· áá«áááșáž áááŒá±áŹááșážáá±á«á·áá±á áá±áŹááșááŒáźážáá±áŹá· áĄáᯠáááșážáĄááœááș áááșážáááșááŻááșááŒáźáž ááŻááșáá±áŹááșážááŒááŹáá±á«á·áá±â áááŻá· ááŒá±áŹááŒáá«áááșá
áááșážáá»ááșááŒááŻááŹááŸáŹ áá±áŹááșá áŹáĄááœááș áááșážáááŻááČ áĄáááááŹážááŻá¶ážáá±áááŹááŸáŹ áááșážáá±ážááŒáźážááŹá ááŻááșáá±ážááŸáŻááșážááœá± ááŒáá·áșáááșááŹááŒáźáž áááșážáá»ááșáá±ážáᏠáááșááŹááČá· ááŻááșáá±ážááŸáŻááșážááᯠáááŸáźááŹááœá±ááŹáááșáž áááșážáááșáááŹážááœá±á áááșážáá»ááșááŒááŻáá°ááœá±áĄáááŻá· ááźááŻááșáááșážááᯠá áááșáááșá áŹážááŸáŻ áá»á±áŹá·áááșážááŹá á±ááČá· áĄáá»ááșááᯠááŒá áșáá«áááșá
âáááșážáá»ááșáá»ááŻáááŹáááșáž áááșážáá»ááșáá±ážááČá· áááșážáá±ážááČá· ááŹááČá·áááŻáá±áŹá· áĄáááșáááŻááŸááááŻááșáá±áŹá·ááČááČá·á áĄáááșážááœá±ááČá ááᏠáá±áŹááșááŒáźáž áááșážááŻááșáá±áááŹá ááááŻááŻááșážááá±áŹá· áááșážáá»ááșááááżáŹ áááșáááŒááșááᯠáááșážáááŹážá áááŒá±áŹááșáá°ážáááșá áĄááŻá á áááżáŹááČá· áááșáááŒááșááČá· ááźáá±ááČá· áĄááŻááŸá áșááœá±á áááșá áŻááŸá áșáá±áŹááș ááŒá áșááŹáááșá áááșážáá»ááșáĄááŻá¶ážáááșážáááșážáááșáá±á«á·á áááșážáá»ááșáá±ážááááșáž áááŸááá°ážáá±á«á·á áĄáČá·áááŻááœá± áĄááŻááșá áŻá¶áá»ááŹâ áááŻá· áŠážáááșááŒá ááŸááșážááŒáá«áááșá
ááŒááŻááșááŒááŻá·áááșáááșáááșážáá»ááșá ááœáŹááœá±ááŸáŹáá±áŹá· áááșážáĄááœááș ááČá ááșážááŻá¶áááŻážááŒá±áŹááșááœá±ááᯠááŻá¶ážááŒáááᯠáááșáááșážáá»á áááŻážáá»ááČá· áááșážáááșááŒáźážááœá±ááᯠááŻááșááŸáČááŒáźáž áááșážáĄááœááș ááŻá¶ážáá±á·ááŸááá«áááșá áĄáᯠáĄááŒá±áĄáá±ááŸáŹááá±áŹá· áááșážááźážááŸááŻááșááŸááŻááșááźážáá±ááČ ááŒá áșááČá· áááșážáááșáá»ááŻááœá±áááŻáá« ááŻááșáá±áŹááșážááŹááŒááŹáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá
áááșážááźážá áááșážáááșááŸááŻááșááŸááŻááșááœááșááČá· ááááŻá·ááœáČá ááá±á«ááșážá áááșáá°ážáááœá±áᏠáááșážáááŹážááœá±áĄáááŻá· áááșážáááŻááŹááźáá»áááșááŒá áșááŒáźáž áááșážáá»ááșáá±ážáá±áŹááșážáááș áááŻáááșáá±áŹá· áááșážáááŹážááœá± ááœá±ááœáŸááșááŒááČá·áĄáá»áááșááœá±áá«ááČá
ááŒáźážááČá·ááČá· ááááááŸáŹ áááșážáá»ááșááŻá¶ážááŒááșáž ááááżáŹááᯠáá±áŹááșáá±áž ááá áá»ááșááá± áá áá áááșážáá»ááșááŒá° ááááżáŹááᯠáá±áŹááșáá±áž áá á ááá± ááá áĄáá áá±ážáá±á«ááșááČá·ááŒáźáž ááŒááșáá±áŹááșážáá±ážááá±áŹá· ááááżáŹááᯠáĄáááșážááŻá¶ážáá»ááș áááá áĄáá á á¶áá»áááșáááș áááșááČá·áááșáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá
ááźááᯠáááșážáá»ááșáá±áž á á¶áá»áááșáááșáááșááČá·ááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș áááșážáááŹážááœá± ááœá±ááœáŸááșááČá·ááŒáá±ááá·áș ááźááŸá áșááŸáŹáá±áŹá· áá±áŹááșáá±ážá áĄáá»ááŻážáĄá áŹážáĄáááŻááș áĄáááșážááŻá¶áž áá á áá»ááș ááá± ááá áá»ááș áĄááááČ ááŸááá±áŹá·ááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áșá áááșáááŒááș áĄáááșážááŻá¶áž ááá ááá± áááá áĄáá áá±ážáááșáá±áááČá· áĄáá«ááŸáŹáá±áŹá· á áŹážáááșáá±áá±áž áĄáááșáááŒá±ááŒá áșááŒááááșáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá
áŠážáááșááŒááČá· áááźážáááșá âááŒáźážááČá·ááČá·ááŸá áșá áááșážáá»ááșáá±ážáá±áŹááșážáááŻááșáá±áŹá· áĄáááșážáá»á±áŹáșááŒáááșáá±á áĄááŻáá±áŹá· ááááŻááșáá±áŹá·áá°ážá áá±áŹááșáá°ááááșáž áááŻážáá±á«ááșáá±áŹá· ááŹá០áááá°ážáá±â áááŻá· ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
áĄááŹá áááșážáááŹážááœá±áᏠáááșážáá±áŹááœá±áĄá±áŹááșá ááŹááŒá±ááœá±ááŸáŹ ááČá ááșážááŻá¶á ááČááźá áááșáž áĄá ááŸáááČá·ááČááœá±ááᯠá ááŻááșáá»ááŻážáá±á·ááŸááá±ááá·áș ááŹááźá„áᯠáá±áŹááșááŒááșáá±ááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááœááșááŹááČá·ááČááᯠáá±áŹááșážáááœá±áᏠáá°áááŻá·ááœá±áá ááááșážááá«áž ááŸáááŻááșáááș áááŻááŻá¶ááČ ááŸááááșáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá
áááșážáááș áááșá ááșááœá±ááᯠáááșážáĄááŻážááᯠáĄááŸáááșáá áčá ááșážáĄááŒá áș áááŻáááșááœá±á áááŻááșááŹááœá±ááŸáŹ áááșážáááșážááŹážááŹáž ááŻá¶ážáááŻá· áááŻááșáá¶áááșááŒáŹážááœá±ááá« ááŸáŹáá°ááŹááŒááČá· áĄáá«ááŸáŹáá±áŹá· áĄááŹáá±áá áááșážáá±áŹááœá±ááᯠááŻááșááŸáČáá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻá· ááœááșážáĄáŹážááœá± áááŻááŒá áșááŹáá«áááșá
áááșážáááșááᯠááŻááșááŸáČááŒáźáž áááŒá±áŹááșáááș á áááșááČá· ááááșáĄááœááșážááŸáŹ áááșá ááșáĄá±áŹááșáááŻááșáž á áá±ááá± á áá±áĄááááᯠáá±áá»áŹááŒááșáá±áŹááș ááá·áșá ááșá ááœá±áá±á«áșáááŻáž áĄáá»á±áŹáááșááŒáźáž áĄáá±áŹááșáááșáááŻááșááČá·áĄáá« ááŸáááČá· áĄááœááșáĄááŒááș ááŸáááŹáááŻá· áááŻáááșááŒáźážááœá±á áĄááá·áșááŒáá·áșáá±áĄáááșáááŻááșááŹááœá±ááŸáŹ áááșážáĄááŻážáĄááŒá áșá áĄááŸáááșáááŻááșááŻá¶ážááœá±áĄááŒá áș áĄááŻá¶ážááŒáŻááŒáá«áááșá ááźáááșážáááșážáĄááŻážááŒáźážááœá±ááᯠáááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶á áĄáá»áŹážááŻá¶áž ááŸáŹáá°ááŒáááșáááŻá· ááááá«áááșá
ááźááᯠáááŻááșáá¶áááșááŒáŹážááᯠáááșáááŻá·áááŻá·á ááœáŹážáááșážááŻááșáá±áŹááșáááŻá·á ááœáŹážá áŹážááœááșááŻááșáááŻá· áááŻáá±á«ááșáááŻáá±ááŹááœá±ááŸáŹ ááŻááșáááșážá áááșá á ááŹááœá± ááŻááșáááŻá·áĄááœááș áááșážáááșááœá± ááŻááșááŸáČáá±áŹááșážáááș áááŻáááș áááșážáááș ááááșááᯠáĄáááșážááŻá¶áž áá»ááșááá±áŹááșážááá± ááŸá áșáá±áŹááșážáĄáá ááááșááŒáááșáááŻá· áááșážáááŹážááœá±á ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá áááșážáĄááœááșááČá· áá±áŹááșážáááșáááŻáááșáá±áŹá· áĄáááșážááŻá¶áž áá»ááș á áá±áŹááșááá± á áá±áŹááșáá±áŹááșááČ áááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹáž áááŻá·áááŻá·áĄááœááș áááŻáá±áŹááșážáááŻáá±ááŒáááșáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá
ááźááᯠáááșážáááșááœá±ááŻááșááČá·áĄáá±á«áș áááșáááŻááșáᏠáá áșáá±áŹáŠážá áźážááŹáááááșáž ááá·áșáááșááŹááœá±áááŸáááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááźááᯠáĄááœááșáĄáá»áœá¶ááŻááșááŹááœá± ááŒá áșááŹááŒáźáž áááșážáá±áŹááœá± ááŻá¶ážááœáŹážááŸáŹááᯠá ááŻážááááșáááșáááŻá· áŠážááŸáá±áŹááșá áááŻáá«áááșá
âáááșážáááșáááŻáá±áŹá· áá áșáá±áŹá ááááŻááșáá°ážáááșáááșá ááŹá០ááá·áșáááșáᏠáááŸááá°ážáá±á áĄáááșááœá±á áááșážááœáŹážáááŻááșáᏠáááŻááŹá áĄáá áșááŒááșá ááŻááșáááșáž áááșážáááșá áĄááŸá áș ááŸá áșáááșá áĄá áááșáá±áŹááșá០ááŒá áșááŹáá±â áááŻá· áá°á ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
áááșážáááșáᏠáá°ááŒááșážááŒá±áŹááșááœá±á·ááČá· áá±áááœá±ááŸáŹ áĄáá»áŹážá ᯠáá±á«ááșáá±áŹááșááŒááŒáźáž áĄáááșááČá· ááœáČá·á ááșážááŸáŻáᏠáĄááŒááșáááșááŸáŹ áĄááœááŹážááČá· áĄáááșááŸáŹ áĄá°áááŻááș áá«ááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș áá±áááŻááŸá±áŹááșáááŻááșááŸáŻ ááŒáá·áșááŹážááŒáźáž ááŹááźá„ááŻáááșáá¶ááČá· áĄáááșááŒá áșááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș áĄáááșáĄááŹáá±ááĄááœááș á áááșážáááșážá ááŻááŒá±áááŻá· áĄáŹážááŹážáááČá· áĄáááșááá»ááŻážáá«á áĄáááșáĄááŹáá±ááááșááœá± áĄááŒááș ááœááșááŒááșáááșá ááááșáčááŹááźáááŻááșáž áááŻá·áááșááŸáŹáááșáž áááșážáááșá áááșážáá±áŹááœá± áá±á«ááșáá±áŹááșáá±ááŹáááŻáááșáž ááœá±á·áááŻááșáá«áááșá
áááșážá á±á·ááá± áááșážáááș á ááŻááșááČá·áĄáá« áááŸá áșááŒáŹá០áĄáááșáá±á«ááșááœááșááŒáźáž áĄáááșáááșááŹááŸáŹáááșáž áááŸá áșááᯠá áááșáááá± á áá±áĄááááČ áĄáá»áŹážááŻá¶ážáááșáááș áááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá áŠážááŸáá±áŹááșááá±áŹá· áááŸá áșááᯠááŒááșáááááșá ᏠáááșáááșáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá áĄááœááșáá±áŹááș áááșážááááșááČá· áĄááŒáá·áșáᏠáá± áá ááá± áá áĄáá ááŸááááșááŒáźáž áááșáááșážááá±áŹá· ááŸá áș ááá ááá± áá á áĄááááŸááá«áááșá
áááșážáááŻááČá·áááșážá á áá»ááŻážááŸááá«áááșá áááșážáááșáĄáááŻá áááșážáááŻá·áá»á±áŹááșážááᯠááŸáźážááŒáźáž á ááá·áșááœááșááŹááČá· áááșážáááșáá»ááŻááœá±ááᯠáá¶áá°ááŒáááᯠáááșážááááșááČá· áááșážááźážáááŻááșááá± áááșážáááș áá¶áá°ááŒáá«áááșá áááșážáááșáá«ážáááŻáá±áŹá· áĄáá«ážáá±áŹááșááŹážááČá· áá°áááŻá·áĄáá±á«áș áĄáá»ááșáĄááŻážááČá· áá¶áá°ááŒáá«áááșá
áááșážáááșáá»ááŻá áááșážáááșáá«ážá áááșážáá»ááșá áááșážááźážááŻáá·áșá áááșážáááșááŒá áșá ááČá· á áŹážááœááșááŹááœá±áĄááŒááșá áááșážáááșááœá±ááČá· áááŻááșááŻá¶á áááșážáá±á«ááșááŹá ááČá· áĄááŻá¶ážáĄáá±áŹááșááœá±á ááá±ážááœá±áá áŹážá áᏠáááșážáá°ážáá«ážááŻááșá ááŸááșááŻááșá ááŹááœá±á áĄáááŻážáĄááŹááœá±áá±ážááČá· áááșážáááșááŒáźážááœá±ááᯠááááșážááááșážááŒáááŻá· áááșážáááșááááșááŒá áșáááŻá· áááșá áŻááŸá áșáááŻáá±áŹááș áĄáá»áááșáá°áááŹáááŻá· áááșážáááșááœá±ááᯠáá°áááșááœá±á áá±ááá¶ááœá± áááșáááŻážááŹážáááșáááŻá· áááŻáá±áááᯠáá±áŹááșá ᏠáááŻáĄááșááŸáŻáĄááœááșáááŻáááșáž áááșážáááșážááŸáŹ ááŒá±ááŸááșážááá·áșáá±ááŒáźáááŻá· áááșážáááŹážááŒáźážááœá±á áááŻáá«áááșá
âáá±áŹááșáŠážááźážáááŻá· áááșážáááș ááááșááá± ááááș ááŻááșáá°ážáááșáááŻáᏠáááșážáá±áŹááČ áááșážáááșááœá± áááșáá»ááșážáááș áĄááœááșáá»ááșážáááșáá±ááŹáááŻážáá»á áĄááŻá áááșážááŒáżááŹáá»áŹá áááșážáááŸááá±áŹá· ááŸáááŹááŻááșá áááșážáááșááœá±áá«ááŻááșá áá±áŹááșážá áá«ááČá·ááČ áááŒááșážááŒááșáž áá±áŹááœá±á ááŒáŻááșážááŒáźáž ááŹááźá„ááŻááœá±á áá±áŹááșááŒááșááŹáááșá ááŹááźá„áᯠáá±áŹááșááŒááșáá±áŹá· ááźážáááșá áŹážáááșááœá± áááŒá áșá áĄááŻááș áááááŻááșááŻááșáá±áŹá·ááŹáá±á«á·â áááŻá· áŠážááŸáá±áŹááșá ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
áŠážáááșááŒááá±áŹááș ááá±áŹá· âáá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá· áááșáááșááá±áŹá·áá»áŹá ááź ááŒááŻááșáááș áááșááŹááŒáź áááŻáááș áááșážáááșáááșážáá±áŹ áááŻáᏠáááŻá·ááŸááŻáŻááșážáá±ááŹáá»áŹá áááșážááááșááČáá áșáá±ážááœá±ááČ áááșáááŻááșáááŻááșáááș áĄáá¶á·áá±ážááᯠááœáŸá±ážáá±ááŹáá»á áááșážáá»ááșáááŻááœá± áááŻááŹáááșáž áááșážáá»ááșáá¶á·ááœá±ááᯠáááșážáááŻá·á áááșážáá±áŹááČ áááșážááááșááČáá±ážááČáááŻááșá áááșážáá»ááșáá±ážááČá· áá±ááœá±ážááŒááșážáá±ážááČá·ááŒááșážá áááá·áș á ááșážá áááșáá»á áĄááŻáá±áŹá· áááșážáááșááœá±á áá«ážááŹá áá±áŹááșááᯠááźáááŻá០áá±ááá«á·áááŹážááČâ áááŻá· áááșážááœáŹážáá±áá«áá±áŹá·áááșá á
http://www.irrawaddyblog.com/2011/09/blog-post_03.html
áááŻááșáááșáá»á±áŹáșááźáĄá±áŹááșááŻ
September 4, 2011 at 4:36 pm
áá áșáá»áŹážááŸáŹ á áœááșážáĄááșááŻááčáááźááá»ááŻá· ááŻááșáááșážááŒááșá
By ááœáźáĄááŻáĄá± (ááŒááșááŹááŹá) – áá±áŹááŒáŹ, 02 á ááșáááșáᏠ2011
áá áșáá»áŹážáááŻááșáá¶ááČááŸáŹ áááŻááșáá¶áááșááŒáŹážá á áœááșážáĄááșááŻááčáááź á áᯠááŻááșáááșážááœá±ááᯠááŻááșáááŻááșáá±ááŒáźáááŻá· áá áșáá»áŹáž ááŹááźáĄá ááŻážáá ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááŻááșáá«áááșá áá«áᏠáá áșáá»áŹážáááŻááșáá¶ááᯠá áźážááœáŹážáá±áž ááááșáááŻá·áĄáá±ážáá°ááŸáŻááœá±ááČá· ááŒááșááœááșážá á áșáááșááŒá±áŹáá·áș áááŻááœááșážáá±ááČá· á áźážááœáŹážáá±áž ááŒááșááŒáźáž áá°áá±áŹááșáááŻá·ááŒááŻážá áŹážáá±ááČá· ááŒá±ááŸááșážááááșáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá ááźááŻááčáááź á ááŻááČááŸáŹ áĄáźáááź áá±áá¶ááŻááčáááźááŒáźážááŒá áșááČá· ENI áááșáž áá«áááșáááŻá· áĄáá»ááŻážááŹáž áĄááœááșáá°ážááŒá±áŹááșážáá±áž áĄáŹááŹáááŻááșáĄááœáČá· NTC á Aref Ali Nayed á áá±áŹááŒáŹáá±á·á ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
áá áșáá»áŹážáá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááș áááŻááŹááá«ááźááČá· áá áčá áŹáá¶ááœá±ááČá· ááá±á«ááșážáá»áŹážá áœáŹ áááŻááșááœáČááœá±ááŒá áșááœáŹážááČá·ááČá· áá áșáá»áŹážáááŻááșáᶠááŒááșááŒáźáž ááááșáá°ááŹáááŻááșááá·áș áááșážáááșážááœá±ááᯠááŸáŹááœá±áááŻá· NTC áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááșááœá±ááČá· áááŻááșáá¶áááșááŒáŹáž áĄááŹááŸáááœá±ááČá· ááŒááșáá áșáááŻááșáᶠááČáá áșááŒááŻá·á ááœá±ážááœá±ážááœáČáĄááŒáźážááŸáŹ áĄááŻáááŻááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááŻááșááŹáá«á
ááá±á·ááá±áŹá· áá áșáá»áŹáž ááŹááźáĄá ááŻážááĄááœáČá·ááᯠáá±áŹááșáá¶á·áááŻá·áĄááœááș áááčááŹá·áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááșááœá±á áá±á«áșáᏠáá±áŹááșáá±á«ááșáž á áá±áŹááșáž á áá±áŹááș áá±ážáááŻá·áĄááœááș áááááŹážááČá·ááŒáá«áááșá ááźááœá±ááœá±ááᯠáĄáá±áŹááșážááŻá¶áž áááșáááŻááŻá¶ážáááŻááșáááČ áááŻááŹááᯠáá áșáá»áŹáž ááŒááșáááșáá°áá±áŹááșáá±áž áĄááœáČá·á áááșážá á áșáá±áá«áááșá
ááá»áááșáááșážááŸáŹááČ áá°áááźá áá°á·áááŻááșáá¶ááČááŸáŹ áá áșáá»áŹážáá¶ááŻá¶ážááᯠáá±áŹááŒáŹáá±á·ááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŒáźážááœáá·áșáá±ážáááŻááșáááᯠááŒáŹáááá±ážáá±á·ááá±áŹá· áááŻáá±ážááźážááŹážááČá· ááŻááŸáŹážáááŻááșáá¶ááœá±á áá áșáá»áŹážááŸáŹ áááșááŸááĄáŻááșáá»áŻááșáá±ááČá· NTC áĄááœáČá·ááᯠáĄáááĄááŸááșááŒáŻááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒá±ááŹááČá·ááŒáá«áááșá
http://www.voanews.com/burmese/news/Libya-09-2-11-129167653.html
áááŻááșáááșáá»á±áŹáșááźáĄá±áŹááșááŻ
September 4, 2011 at 4:38 pm
áááșá áŹážáá»á±ááŸáŻááœá± áááŻááșáá°ážáááŻá· áá áșáá»áŹážááŹááźáĄáŻááșáá»áŻááșáá±áž áĄáŹááŹáááŻááș ááááá±áž
By ááœáźáĄááŻáĄá± (ááŒááșááŹááŹá) – á áá±, 03 á ááșáááșáᏠ2011
áá áșáá»áŹážáááŻááșáá¶ááŸáŹ áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááșáá±áŹááșáž áááŻááŹááá«ááź (Moammar Gadhafi) ááČá·áá±ááááșá áĄáááșááŹážááœá± áá°áááŻá·áááșáááŻáá°ážááČá·áá«á áááșá áŹážááá»á±áá«áá°ážáááŻá· áĄáá»ááŻážááŹážáĄááœááșáá°ážááŒá±áŹááșážáá±áž áá±áŹááșá áź (NTC) á áááŻááșááœááșážááœáŹážáá«áááșá áĄááœááșáá°ááŒá±áŹááșážáá±ážáááșááœá±áᏠáááșááŻá¶á·ááŸááșážáᏠáááŻááșáá±áŹááșáá«áá°ážá áá°áááŻá·ááČá· áááșáááșááᯠááŻááșááááčáᏠááááááŻááșá á±áĄáŹááș áá±áŹááșážáá±áŹááșážááœááșááœááș áááșáá¶áá«áááșáááŻá· NTC ááČá· ááŻá„ááčáááčá áĄááź ááŹáááŻááź (Ali Tarhouni) á ááá áșáááŻááź (Tripoli) ááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáșááŸáŹ á áá±áá±á·áááČ ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááœáŹážáá«áááșá
áááŻááșáááŻááș áááșááŒááșááŸáŻááœá±ááŻááșááŹážááČá·áá°ááœá±ááᯠáááșáá¶ááČá·áá±ááŹááŸáŹáá±áŹááș áááŹážáááșááœááș áááŻááșáá«áá°ážáááŻá· áá°áááŒá±áŹááœáŹážáá«áááșá ááá áșáááŻááźááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáșá ááŻá¶ááŒáŻá¶áá±ážááᯠáááŻááșááœááșáááŻá·ááČá· áááșážááźážááŹážáá°ááœá±ááČá· áá¶ááŒááčááŹáááŻááŻá¶ážááŒááșáááŻá· áá±áŹáșáááźááááș ááœáČá·á ááșážáááŻááșááŹáááŻáááșáž áá áčá áᏠááŹáááŻááźá ááŒá±ááŹááœáŹážáá«áááșá
ááá±á·á áĄá á±áŹáááŻááșážááŸáŹáá±áŹá· áá°áááŻá· áááșááœá±áᏠáĄáŹážááŹááŸáŻáááŹážáááșá áááșááŒááŻá·áááŻáááᯠáááșáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáááșá áá«áá±ááČá· ááœá±ážááŒá±áá» áááŻááșááœáČááœá± áááŒá áșá á±áá»ááșáá«áá°ážáááŻá· NTC áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááș áá°á áșááŹáᏠáĄááșááČááș áá»áááș (Mustafa Abdel Jalil) á ááŒá±áŹááœáŹážáá«áááșá áááșáááșááá»ááČá· áĄá ááŻážááĄááœáČá·áá±áŹááșážáĄááœááș ááááșáᏠáĄáá áșáĄáááșáááșá áČáá±áž áááșááŸááșááŹážáááșáááŻá· áááșáá«ááź (Benghazi) ááŒááŻá·ááŸáŹáá»ááșážáááČá· ááááșážá ᏠááŸááșážáááșážááœáČááŸáŹ áá áčá áᏠáá»áááș á ááŒá±áŹááœáŹážáá«áááșá áĄááŻáĄáá»áááșáᏠáá áčá áᏠááá«ááźááᯠáá áčá áŹáá¶ááČá· ááŹááČ (Sirte)á áááźáá«áá áș (Bani Walid) ááČá· áááŒáŹážáá±á áĄáá»áŹážáĄááŒáŹážá áá°ááœá± áĄá±ážáĄá±ážáá»ááșážáá»ááșáž áááșáááșáá»áááŻá· áĄáá»áááșáá«ááČáááŻá· áá°áááČ ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
áĄáááŻááșáĄáá¶áááșá áĄáŹážááŻá¶áž áááșáááșáá»ááŒáááŻá· áá±áŹááșááŻá¶ážáááșááŸááșáááșááᯠááŹááá·áș á áá±áá±á·áĄáá áááșáááșáž áááŻážáá±ážáááŻááșáá«áááșá áĄáááșááŹážááœá±áá±áááŻááșáá±ááČá· áá±áááœá±ááᯠáááșáá±áŹááș á áźážáááșážáááŹáá»ááŻážááœá± áááŻááșááááŻá· NTC áĄááŹááŸáááœá±á áá»áŸá±áŹáșááá·áșááŹážááŹáá«á
áá áșáá»áŹáž áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááșáá±áŹááșáž áááŻááŹááá«ááźáĄáá±ááČá· áá±áŹááșáááș ááœá±ážááŒá±áá»ááŸáŻááœá± áĄááŒá áșááá¶áááŻá·ááČá· áá áșáá»áŹáž áá°ááŻáĄááœááș áááŹážáá»áŸáá»áŸáá ááŒá áșáĄá±áŹááș áááșáááșáá»áááŻá· áĄáᯠáá áșáá»áŹážáááŻááșáá¶áá áșááᯠááœáŸááșááŹážááČá· áá°áááźáá¶áĄáááș áĄááź áááșááČááș áĄááŻááșáááș (Ali Kemal Aydin) á áá±áŹááșážáááŻááœáŹážáá«áááșá
áá áșáá»áŹážáááŻááșáá¶ááČá· áĄááŹáá«ááșááČá·áááșáááșááŒáźáž ááŒá±áŹáááŻááœá±ážááœá±ážááŸáŻááœá±ááŻááșáááŻá·áĄááœááș ááŻáááááčá áĄáá°áž áááŻááșá áŹážááŸááș áĄáźáááșááŹáááș (Ian Martin) ááááșáž á áá±áá±á·á ááá áșáááŻááźááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáșááᯠáá±áŹááșááŸáááœáŹážáá«áááșá
http://www.voanews.com/burmese/news/Libya-09-03-11-129198033.html
áááŻááșáááșáá»á±áŹáșááźáĄá±áŹááșááŻ
September 4, 2011 at 4:43 pm
ááœáŸá±ááá«áááŹáá±áŹáș áááŹážááœáČ ááŒááșááČáá±ážáááááș
áááŻáááŻááșáž | ááŒáŹáááá±ážáá±á·á á ááșáááșááŹá áá áááș áááá ááŻááŸá áș áá ááŹááź áá áááá áș .
áá»ááșážáááŻááș (áááčááá) á á ááŹáááŹáá±ážáááșááŒáźážááŹáá០ááœáá·áșááŒáŻáá»ááșáááŸáááŒáźáž ááŒá áșáá±áŹáșáááșáž ááŒááșááČáá±ážáááșááŒáźážááŹáá ááááșáááșáááŒáá·áș áĄá ááŻážáááᯠáá±áááșáá±á·ááŸááá±áŹ ááœáŸá±ááá«áᯠáá°áááá»áŹážááá·áș áááșááŻááș ááŒáá·áșááŒááșáááŻááș ááŹááŻááááááčáá á áŹáááșáááŻááșá០áááŹáá±áŹáș áĄááŸááșáááŹááźáá áááŹážááœáČ áá»ááșááŒáŹážááœáŹážáááșá
ááááșážááŻááșážááŒááŻá·áááșááŸá ááŹáááŹáá±áž áááșááŒáźážááŹááááŻááș áááčáá°ááźááááááŹááș áĄáá±áŹááșáĄáĄáŻá¶á ááŒáŹááŹááá±ážááŸáá·áș áá±áŹááŒáŹ
áá±á·áá»áŹážááœááș áááŹážáá±áŹáááș áááșáá±áŹáș áá ááŸá áș (áá«áá±áŹáș áá áá«ááŸá) ááœáŸá±ááá«áááŹáá±áŹáșá á áźá ááșááŹážááČá·ááŹ
ááŒááșááČáá±áž áááșááŒáźážááŹáá ááœáá·áșáááŒáŻááŒá±áŹááșáž ááœáČá áźá ááșáá°áá»áŹážááᯠááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááŹáááșáᯠáĄááŸááșáááŹááźáá áĄáááá·áș ááŸááááșá
ááœáŸá±ááá« áááŹáá±áŹáșáááș áááșááŻááșááŻááčááááčááááŻááș áĄáá»ááŻážáá±áŹááșáá»áŻááșá á áŹáááșááŹážáá¶áᏠáĄáá«áž ááá áá»á±áŹáșááŸáááá·áș ááŒáá·áșááŒááșáááŻááș ááŹáᯠááááááčáá á áŹáááșáááŻááșá ááŹáá áááŻááșááŒááș áááŹáá±áŹáșááŒá áșááŒáźáž ááŒáááșážáá»ááșážáá±ážáĄááŒá±áŹááșáž
áá±áŹááŒá±áŹáááș á áźá ááșááŹážááČá·áááșá
âááá±áŹááșááČá· ááá±áŹááș áá áșáááșáááșááŒááșáá±ááŒááŹááœá± ááŒáŹážááᏠá áááșááá»ááșážááŹáá°ážá ááá±áŹááŹážááŒáźážááŒáźážááČá· ááŹážáááșááœáá·áșááœáŸááș áááșážáá¶áá±ážááŒááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááŸáááŸááŻááșážááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááŒáááșážáá»ááșážáá±áž ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŒáá«áááŻááČá· áá±á«ááșážá ááșááČá· áá»áŻááșá ááŒáááșážáá»ááșážáá±ážáááŹážáá±áŹáșááᯠáááá áá±áŹááááŻá·áá»â áᯠáĄááŸááșáááŹááźáá ááŒá±áŹáááșá
âááŻáááááá»áá±áŹá· áááșááŒá áșáááŻá· áá±áŹááșážáá»ááŻážáá±ážáááșáááŻáᏠáááșááŻááŹážááŸáááșáž ááá±áŹáá«áá°ážá áááșáááŹááŸáááŸ
áááșáž ááááá·áșáá«áá°ážá áááșááŒá áșááŒááșážááŒá±áŹáá·áș áá±ážááČááŒá áșáááșáá«áááșá áĄáČáá«ááœá±ááᯠááŻááșážááŒáźážá ááŻááŹážáá±áŹááŹážááČá· áááŹážáá±áŹáșááœá±ááČá ááœáČááŻááșááŒáźážáá±áŹá· áá±áŹááŒááááŻá·áá«á áĄáČááźáá±á«ááșážá ááșááŒáŹážááœáŹážáááŻá·áá»áŹáž ááááșááœáŹážááŹááŹáž ááááá°ážâ
áᯠáááșáááșáááá·áșáááŻáááșá
áááșááá·áș áĄááœááșááŒá±áŹáá·áș áááŹážááœáČ ááááșáááșáááșááᯠáááŹáá±áŹáș áááŻááșáááŻááșáááș ááááááŻááșááČ ááŒá áșáá±áá±áŹáșáááșáž áĄáááŻááșáĄáᶠáááŻááșáá¶áá±áž áĄááșáĄáŹážá áŻáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș ááźážá ááșááá·áș áááŹáá±áŹáșá ááááș áááŹážááœáČáĄáá»ááŻá· ááááșáááșáá¶ááá°ážáááșá
ááŹááŻááááááčáá á áŹáááșáááŻááșááŒáźážááœááș áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááș áĄáá«áĄáááș áá áá»ááŻážáááș áá»á±áŹááșážááŹážáá»áŹážá áááŻááșáá¶áá±ážá ááźáá áááșážáá»áźá á áŹáá±áĄáááŻááșážáĄáááŻááșážááŸáá·áșá áá°ááŸáŻáá±áž áĄááœáČá·áĄá ááșážáááșáá»áŹážá á©ááŻááș á áááșáá±á·á áá ááŸá áșááŒá±áŹááș áá°ááŻáĄáŻá¶ááŒáœááŸáŻ “ááŸá áșáá±ážááŻá¶áž” ááŸá áșáááșáááșáá±á·ááᯠáá»ááșážáááČá·áááșá
âáá«á ááŻááčáááŹáᏠáá«áááŹá áá«ááááŹáááœá± ááŻááčáááŹáᏠááŻááșážááŒáźážáá»á±áŹááșážááŸáŹ ááœááșážááŹáááșáᏠáá¶ááá ááœááșáž ááŻááčááááááœááșáž áááŻááșáá°ážá áá±áŹááș áááșáčáááșážááŹááŸá°áááș áá¶áááááŸá°áᏠááŻááčáááá ááŸá°áᏠáááŻááșáá°ážá áĄáČáá«
ááŹáá»áŹáž ááœáá·áșáááŒáŻáááŻááșá ááŹáĄááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŸááááŻá·ááČáâ áᯠáááŹáá±áŹáșááááá·áșáááșá
áááŹáá±áŹáșá âáá«ážáá«ážáááŸá±áŹááșááŒáá«á á±ááČá·âá âáááŻááșááŒáœá±ážáááŻááșáá áșâá âááŻááčáááŹááŹáá±áŹááșáž ááá±áŹááșá á áœááșážáĄáŹážâá âááááŹážáááŻááșááŒáá«ááČá·âá âááŹáááŹáá±áŹáșááᯠá á±áŹáșááŹážáá° ááá±áŹááșá áá±áŹááșáâ á ááá·áș áááŹážáá±áŹáșáá»áŹážááŸáŹ áá°ááŒááŻááșáá»áŹážáááșá
ááŻááčáááŹááŹáááș áĄáá»áŹážá áŻááŒá áșáá±áŹ áááŻááșáá¶ááœááș áĄá ááŻážááááŻáá±áááșáááșáᯠáá°ááá±áŹ áá¶ááŹáá±áŹáșáá»áŹážááᯠáĄáá»áŹážááŒááșáá° áááŹážáá±áŹááœáá·áșáá»áŹáž ááááșáááșáá±á·ááŸááááșá
ááŒááșááĄááŒá±á ááŻááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáᶠáá°á·áĄááœáá·áșáĄáá±áž áááŹáá±ážáá±ážáĄááœáČá·á០ááœáŸááșááŒáŹážáá±ážááŸá°áž áŠážáĄá±áŹááșáá»ááŻážáááșážá
âáááŻáá·áșááČá· áááŹážáá±áŹááŹá áááŒáŹážááŹááŹáááŹážááᯠááŻááșáááșááŹááœá±á ááŹááŹáá±ážáĄáááááŻááșáž ááŒá áșáĄá±áŹááș áááșááźážááŹááŸááááșáá±áŹá· áá«ááᯠááá·áșáááșáááŻááșáááșáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹááŹážáááșá áĄáᯠááźáááŹáá±áŹáș áá±áŹááŹážááČá· áĄááŒá±áŹááșážáĄááŹá áááșáá±áŹá·á០áááŒáŹážááŹááŹááᯠááŻááșáááșááŹáááŸááá°ážá áááŹážáááčáááČá· áá°ááŹážááœá±ááČá· ááŒáááșážáá»ááșážááŸáŻááČá· áááŻáá·áșáá»áá·áșáááŹáž áá±áŹááșážáá±ážáááŻááČ áá±áŹááŹážááŹááŒá áșáááșáâ áᯠááŒá±áŹáááșá
http://www.mizzimaburmese.com/news/inside-burma/8255-2011-09-01-13-16-19.html
zaw min
September 5, 2011 at 8:46 pm
áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșááá»ááșááŸáŹááŻá¶ážáá«ááșááŻá¶ááŸáá·áșááᜠáááŻááșáááŻááșáá±ážááŹážááŹážáá±áŹáá±áŹááșážáá«ážáááŻáá« ááŒááșáá°á·áá±ááșáá»áŹáááșááœááșáĄááșáčáá«áá±á·ááœááșááŻááșáá±ááœáá·áșáááŸááá«áááșáᯠáĄááșááźááŹáá»áŻááșáááŹáá±ááŒáá·áșááŸááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááœáŹáá«áááșá
ááá±áá«áááŻááșáᶠáááŻáááșáááŻááŒááŻá·ááœááș áá»ááșážáááá·áș áĄááŒááșááŒááșáááŻááșááŹááŻááșááŸááșááŒááœáČááŸáááșáž áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșááĄááŒá±áŹááșážááŒááșáááșáááŻááșáá°ážááŹážááá·áș The Lady áááșááŹážáááŻááŒáááœáŹážáááșááŻááááá«áááșá
ááááșážáĄááŒáá·áșáĄá áŻá¶ááᯅ.www.RFAnews.com ááŸáŹááœáŹážáá±áŹááșáááșáá°áááŻááșáá«áááșá
king
September 5, 2011 at 9:40 pm
ááŹááźá„ááŻááŸáá·áș áááŹááááșáááșážáá»ááșáááŻááșááŹáá»áŹážááᯠáááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșáž á ááșáááșáááŒááș ááŻááșáá±áŹááșááŹááŸáŻááŸáá·áșáĄáá° ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶á ááááŠážááŻá¶áž ááŒá áșááŹááá·áș áááŹááááșáááșážáá»ááș ááááșážááááșážáá±áž á á¶ááŒááœáŹ (Green Village) ááᯠáááșááŻááșááŒááŻá· áĄááźážáá áșáááŻááșááœááș áááșáá±áŹááșááœáŹážáááș á áźá ááșáá±ááŒáźááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŹááááșáááșážáá»ááșááŸáá·áș áááŻážáá±áááááŹááŸááș áá±á«ááșááŹááœááșážááœááșá áá-á-áááá áááșááœááș ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááșá áĄáááŻáá« ááá áčá áĄááœááș NGO áĄááœáČá·áĄá ááșážáá áșáᯠááŒá áșáá±áŹ Green Development Green Growth (GDGG) áĄááœáČá·ááᯠááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶á០áááŹááŸááș áá áŠáž áá«áááș áááșáá±áŹááșááŒáźáž ááŻááșáá±áŹááșááœáŹážááŒáááșááŒá áșáᏠáááŹááááșáááșážáá»ááșááŸáá·áș áááŻážáá±áá áááŹááŸááș áá±á«ááșááŹááœááșážááœááșá áá áșáá±áŹáá áșáááșáááŹááŸááș áŠážáĄáŻááșáž(FREDA)á áŠážááááșážááœááșážá áá±á«ááșáᏠáááșáá±áŹááșááœááșááŸáá·áș áĄá ááŻážááĄááŒáááșážá áŹáž áĄááŹááŸáááŒáźážáá»áŹáž áá«áááșááŒááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá áĄá áááșážáá±áŹááșááœáŹ áááșáá±áŹááșáá±ážáĄááœááș áááșážáááŻá·áĄááœáČá·á ááźáĄááŻááźáĄáááŻááșážááŒáá·áș á ááșážáááșááŒáźážá áźážááŒááŒáźáᯠááááŸáááᏠáĄá±áŹááșáááŻááŹá áĄááœááșážá ááŒááșááœááșážááŒááșáá០áááŹááŸááșáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș ááœá±ážááœá±ážááœáČáá áșáááș áá»ááșážáááŒáŻááŻááșááœáŹážáááș ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșážá áááșááŸáááœááș áĄááœáČá·áááș áá áŠáž ááá·áșáááșááá·áș áááșááŻá¶ááœá±ááŒáá·áș áĄáááșážááᯠá áááșáááșáááșáá±ááŒáźááŒá áșáᏠNGO áááșáááșááŒáá·áș áááŹááááșáááșážáá»ááș áĄáá»ááŻážááŒáŻááŻááșááœáŹážáááș ááŒá áșááá·áșáĄááŒááș áĄá áááșážáá±áŹááșááœáŹáĄááœááș áá±ááŹááᯠáááá»á áœáŹ ááááșááŸááșááá±ážááČ áááșá ááșááááșážáá»áŹážáĄá áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá·áĄááœááș áááșážáá°ážááŒááŻá·áááș áĄááœááșáž áááșááŻááș-áá±ááŒááșáá±áŹáș-áááčááá±áž áĄááŒááșáááșážáááŒáźážáá áșáá»áŸá±áŹááș ááŒá áșáááŻááșááŒá±áŹááșáž áááá ááŻááŸá áș á ááșáááșáᏠá áááșáá±á·ááŻááș ááŒááșááŒááșáᏠáá»áŹáááșááœááș áá±áŹáșááŒááŹážáá«áááșá
king
September 5, 2011 at 10:22 pm
ááŸá±áŹááșááᯠááœá±ááČ áá±ážááœááș ááœááș áá±á«áșáᏠáááșážáá±áŹááș áá»áź áááșáááșáá±
ááŒááșáᏠáááŻááșáᶠá ááŸá±áŹááș ááᯠááœá±ááČ áá±ážááœááș ááœááș áĄáá±áááááș áá±á«áșáᏠáááșážáá±áŹááșáá»áź áááșáááș
áá±áááș áᯠááŒááșáᏠááźááźááááș á០áááŸá áá±áŹ ááœá±ááŒá±áž áá±ážááœááș ááŸááșáááșáž áá»áŹáž áĄá ááááááșá
ááŒááșáᏠáááŻááșáᶠááœááșáž ááŸá áĄá ááŻážá áĄááœáČ áĄá ááșážáá»áŹáž ááááŻáááș ááŸáá·áș áĄá ááŻážááááșáá»áŹáž á០áááŻááșáááŻááș
ááá·áș áĄáá±áááááș áá±á«áșáᏠáá»áŹážááŸáŹ áááșáž áááá áááș á·ááŸá áááșá áááŻáááș á áááźážááœáŹážáᏠáá±áž
ááá±ááŒá±áŹááșáž á ááᯠá·ááŻááșááœááșážááŻááș á ááá·áș ááŻááčáááá ááŻááșáááșážáá»áŹáž á០áááșáž áĄáá±áááááș áá±á«áșááŹ
ááœá± áĄáááșážááŻá¶áž áááșáž á ááá áááŻážáááș á·áááŻááș áááŻááșáááșá
ááŒááșáᏠáááŻááșáᶠááœááșáž ááŸá ááŻááčáááá áááșáá»áŹáž á áĄáá±áááááș áá±á«áșáᏠáááŻááș áááŻááș ááŸáŻ ááŸáŹ áááșáž ááá
áááș á·ááŸá ááŒáźáž á áĄá ááŻážá áááŻááș ááá·áș áĄáá°áĄááźáá±ážáá±áž NGO áá»áŹáž áááŻááș áááŻááșááá·áș áĄáá±áááááșáá±á«áș
áᏠááœá±áá»áŹáž ááŸáŹ áá° áááșáž áááá áá»á±áŹáșáááŻáž áááș á·ááŸá áááșá
ááŸá±áŹááșááᯠááœá± ááČááŸááș ááá·áș áá±ážááœááș ááœááș áá±á«áșáᏠáááșáž áááá ááźážáá«áž ááŸá áááș áᯠáááș á·ááŸááșážáááŒáźáž
ááᯠááœá±ááŒážáá±ážááœááș ááœááș áááŻááșáᶠááŒáŹážáááŻááșáž ááŒááșáá±áŹááș ááŒááșáᏠáá»áŹáž á០ááŒááșááœááșáž ááᯠᷠááŒááșááᯠá·ááœá±áá»áŹáž
áááŹáčáááŸáá·áș áááźážááœáŹážáá»áŹáž á ááČááŸááșááŸáŻáá»áŹážá áááșá ááș á០áá áčá ááșáž áááșááᯠᷠáááș ááŸáá·áș ááœááșážáá°áááș ááČ
ááŸááșááŸáŻ áá»áŹáž ááŒááșáᏠááŒááșáá±áŹááș áááŻááșáᶠááŒáŹáž áá¶ááááș ááŸáá·áș ááŒááșá áĄááœáČ á· áĄá ááșážáá»áŹáž á០ááČááŸááșááŸáŻ
áá»áŹáž á ááŒááșááœááșáž á០áááșážáá»áźááŹáž á áááŻážáᏠáĄááŸááșáá ááŸáá·áș ááŸá±ážáá±áŹááșáž áá áčá ááșáž áááșáá° áááș áĄááœááș
ááČ ááŸááș ááŸáŻ áá»áŹáž áĄá ááŸá áááș ááᯠᷠáá«áááș áááșá
ááŒááșáᏠáááŻááșáᶠááœááșáž ááᯠᷠáá± á·á ááș áĄáá±áááááș áá±á«áșáᏠáááșáž áá á០áá á áá áĄááŒá±áŹááșáž áĄáá»ááŻáž áá»ááŻáž
ááŒáá·áș áááșáá±áŹááș áááșá áááá ááŻááŸá áș ááŸáá·áș áááá áᯠááŸá áș áá»áŹážáááș ááŒááșáᏠáááŻááșáᶠááœááșážááᯠᷠáĄáá±áááááș
áá±á«áșáᏠááœá± á ááčáá° áá»áŹáž áááșáá±áŹááș ááŸáŻ áĄáá»áŹáž ááŻá¶áž ááŸá áș ááŒá áșáááșá
ááᯠááœááș áá»ááș ááŸáŻ ááČ ááœááș ááŒááșá á០áááŻááșáᶠááœááșáž ááᯠᷠá áźážááœáŹážáá±áž áĄá áááșážááŸáźážááŒáŻááș ááŸá¶ áááș áááșáá±áŹááș
áᏠááá·áș ááœá±ááŒá±ážáá»áŹáž ááá«áááș áá«á
naywoonni
September 7, 2011 at 8:42 pm
áá»áźáĄááș(á áș)áĄááșăáááááșážáăáááááșáž ááŻááșážáá»áŹáž á ááșáááșááŹááœááșăáá±áŹááșážáá»áá±ážááá·áș ááááșážáááŸááșáᯠáĄáááșááŒáŻ
Friday, 02 September 2011 07:23 ááœáŸá±áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááș áĄáœááșáááŻááșážáá»áŹáááș
E-mail Print
GSM phone
áááșááŻááșáá ááșáááșáᏠá
ááááșážá áááŻáá±áž
GSM phone ááŒááșááŹá· áááșááœááșáá±áž ááŻááșáááșážá០áá»áźáĄááșáĄááș á ááááșážá áááááșáž ááŻááșážáá»áŹážááᯠá ááșáááșááŹá áĄááœááșáž ááŻááșáá±ážáááș ááááșážáá»áŹáž ááœááșáá±á«áșáá»ááș ááŸááá±áŹáșáááșáž áááá ááŸá áș áááșážáááŻááșážááŸáᏠá áááș áá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșáááș ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒááșááŹá· áááșááœááșáá±áž ááŻááșáááșážá០áĄááŒáźážáááșážáĄááŹááŸá áŠážáá±áŹáșáááșážáŠáž á áĄáááșááŒáŻ ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááŻááșááŒááșáž ááŒá áșáááșá â áá»áźáĄááșáĄááș á ááááșážá á ááááșážááŻááșáž ááŹááá·áș ááááŻááșážááŸáŹ ááŻááșáá±ážáááș áááŻááČá·ááááșážáᏠáááŸááșáá«áá°ážâ ááŻáááșážá ááŒááșážáááŻáááŻááșáááșá
áá»áźáĄááșá áșáĄááș ááŻááșážáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áááșáááșáᏠááááș ááŒá±áŹááČá·ááá·áșáĄáááŻááșáž ááŒááșáᏠáá áșáááŻááșáá¶ááŻá¶áž á áááșáž ááŻá¶ážá áœáČáááŻááșáá±áž á áźážáá¶ááááșáž á áááșááŒáźáž áá«ážááĄááŒáŹááœááș á áááș áá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșáááș ááŒá áșáᏠáááŠáž áááșáááșááá»áŹáž áááŻáááșáž áááșáž áĄáá»áááșááŸáᏠáááșááŸááș áá±ážáááŻááșáááș ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áááșážá ááŸááșážááŒáááșá áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáșá ááŻááșážááŻá¶ážá áœáČáá°áá»áŹáž áĄááŒáŹážááœááș áá»áźáĄááșá áșáĄááșáááááșážá áááááșáž ááŻááșážáá»áŹáž áááșáá¶áá»áá±ážáááș áĄááŒááșáááșááŸá ááŻááșážááŒá±áŹá ááŒá áșáá±áŹ á áááá áș á á áá»ááșá០áá»á±áŹá·áá»áá±ážáááș áá°áá±áŹ ááááșážáá»áŹážáááșáž áá»á¶ááŸá¶áá»ááș ááŸáááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŻááșáž ááŻá¶ážá áœáČáá°áááŻá·ááᯠáááșááœááș áá±ážááŒááșážáá»ááșáá»áŹážáĄá ááááááșá áááșážááááșážááŸáá·áș áááșáááșááááșáž áŠážáá±áŹáșáááșážáŠážá â ááŻááșážááŒá±áŹáááŻá áá±ážááŸáŻááșážááœá±áááșáž áĄáááșááŸáŻááșážááŹážáĄáááŻááșáž ááŒá áșáá«áááșá áááŻážáááŻá·áá»áŸá±áŹá·áááŻá· áĄá áźá ááș áááŸááá±ážáá«áá°ážâ áᯠáĄááááŒáŻ ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááŻááșááŒááșáž ááŒá áșáááșá
áááșááœááșáá±áž ááááșáž áĄáá»ááșáĄáááșáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áááșáááșáᏠáááșááœááșáá±áž áááșááŒáźážááŹá website ááŸáá·áș ááááŹááŻá¶ Web Portal áááŻá·ááœááș ááááșážáĄáá áșáá»áŹáž áĄáááșáááŒááș áááșáá±ážáá»ááș ááŸáááŒá±áŹááșáž áááșážáááșááșáá»áŹážááœááș ááááșážáĄáá áșáá»áŹáž áááŸááá«á áĄáá áșááŒá±áŹááșážááČ ááŻááșáá±áŹááșááŸáŻ áááŸáá ááŹááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áááșážá áááșáááș ááŒá±áŹáááŻáááŻááșáááșá ááŒááșááŹá· áááșááœááșáá±áž ááŻááșáááșážáááș áá»áźáĄááșá áșáĄááș á áááșáž ááŻá¶ážá áœáČáááŻááșáá±áž á áźáá¶ááááșážááŸáá·áșáĄáá° ááŻááșáž ááźááș (bill) áá»áŹážááᯠááŻááșážááŻá¶ážá áœáČáá° áĄáá»ááșážáá»ááșáž ááœá±ááœáŸáČá áá áșááŒáá·áș áááșáá¶ááœá±ááŒáá·áș áá±ážáááŻááșááá·áș á áá áșááᯠá ááșážáááșáá±ááČ ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒááșááŹá· áááșááœááșáá±áž ááŻááșáááșážá០á áŻá¶ážá ááșáž ááááááșá
http://www.shwedaungtaung.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=209:2011-09-02-07-28-00&catid=81:myanmar-news&Itemid=427
naywoonni
September 7, 2011 at 8:45 pm
ááŸááŻááșááŹáᏠá ááșááŸáŻááŻááș á០á áœáá·áșáá áș áá±ááœááș áá°ááᯠáĄááčáááŹááș ááŒá áșá á±áá±áŹ áĄáŹáááșážáá áș áá«ááșáá«áááșáá±
Wednesday, 31 August 2011 15:48 ááœáŸá±áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááș áĄáœááșáááŻááșážáá»áŹáááș
E-mail Print
áááșážáááșá á¶
áááșááŻááșá á©ááŻááș- áá
ááŒááșááŹá· á áźážááœáŹážáá±ážááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáș áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá·á áĄáááșáá á ááșááŸáŻááŻááșáááșážáá»áŹáž áááșáááșáá±áá±áŹ ááŸááŻááșááŹáᏠá ááșááŸáŻááŻááșá០á ááșááŻá¶ááŒáźážááŸá áșááŻá á áœáá·áșáá áș áá±áá»áŹážááœááș áá°ááᯠáĄááááșáĄáá±áŹááș ááŒá áșá á±áá±áŹ áĄáŹáááșážáá áș áĄááŒááș áááčááŻááŹááșáá»áŹážá áœáŹ áá«áááșáá±ááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŻááșááŹáá±áŹ áááŹáááșáááŻááșáᏠááŻáá±áá á áŹáááșážáá áșá á±áŹááșááœááș áá±áŹáșááŒááŹážáááșá
áĄáááŻáá« ááŻáá±áá á áŹáááșážáĄá ááŸááŻááșááŹáᏠá ááșááŸáŻááŻááșá០á ááșááŻá¶ááŒáźáž ááŸá áșááŻá ááœá±á áááŻážá áá±áŹááșážá á áœáá·áșáá áșáá± áá»áŹážááᯠAtonic Absorption Sbectroseopy á ááșááŒáá·áș áááŻááșážááŹááŹááœááș áááșáááź á ááșááŻá¶ááŒáźáž áĄááźážááŸá á áœáá·áșáá áșáá±á
áĄáŹáááșážáá áș áĄáá»áŹážááŻá¶áž áá«áááșááŸáŻááŸáŹ á.áá á PPN ááŒá áșááŒáźáž áĄááŒáŹážá ááșááŻá¶ááŒáźáž ááᯠáĄááźážááááŻááșááœááș á.ááá PPN ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áá±áŹáșááŒááŹážáááșá áá°ááᯠáĄááčáááŹááș ááŒá áșá á±áá±áŹ áĄááŒáŹážáááčááŻááŹááșáá»áŹáž ááŒá áșááá·áș ááČá ááŒáá«ážá
ááŒá±ážááź ááŸáá·áș ááŹááŻááŒááșá ááș áá»áŹážáááŻáááșáž ááœá±ááááŻážááá±áŹááșáž áĄáááŻááș á áœáá·áșáá áșáá±áá»áŹážááᯠááŻá¶ááŸááșáááŻááșážáᏠáá±ááŹááœááș áá«áááșááŸáŻ áááŹáááŸáŹ áĄááááŻáž áá±ááŒá±áŹááșáž áááșáž á áŹáááșážáĄá ááááááșá
âááŻáá±áá ááŒáŻááŻááșáááŻá·áá±ááᯠá ááșááŻá¶ááœá±á áááŻááșáááŻááș á áœáá·áșáá áșááČá·áá±ááᯠááœáá·áșáááŒáŻááČá· áĄááœááș á ááșááŻá¶ áááșáááșážáá»ááșááŹážá áá±ááœá±áááŻáá°ááŒáźáž á ááșážáááșááČá·áááŹáá«á ááź áĄááŒá±ááœá±ááááŻá· ááŻá¶ážááŸá áșáá±áŹááș ááŒáŹáá«áááșââáᯠáááșáž á áŹáááșážááŒáŻá áŻáá°á áááŻáááșá ááŒáźážááČá·ááá·áș áááá ááŻááŸá áș ááŸá áșáááșážáááŻááșáž ááááșáž ááŸááŻááșááŹáᏠá ááșááŸáŻááŻááșá០á áœáá·áșáá áșáá±áŹ áá±áá»áŹážááœááș áá°ááᯠáĄááááșáĄáá±áŹááș ááŒá áșá á±áá±áŹ áááșááźážááźážááŹáž áá«áááșááŸáŻááŸáŻááșážááᯠá ááșážáááșááČá·ááŒáźáž áĄáá»ááŻážááŒáŻ ááźááá±áŹááșááŒá áșáá±áŹ EM ááŒáá·áș ááŻáá±áá ááŒáŻááŻááșááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒááșááœááșážááŻááș áĄáááșá ááș áá»áŹáááșáá áșá á±áŹááșááœááș áá±áŹáșááŒááČá·áá°ážáááșá
ááŸááŻááșááŹáᏠá ááșááŸáŻááŻááșááŸá á ááșááŸáŻááŻááșáá»áŹážá០á áœáá·áșáá áșáá±áá»áŹážááᯠá áá áșááá» á áœáá·áșááŻááșáááș áááșážá áá áșáá±áŹááșážáá»áŹáž áááŻáĄááșáá»áŸááșááŸáááŒáźáž áááșááŸá áĄáá±áĄááŹážááœááș ááŸááŻááșááŒá áș áĄááœááșážáááŻá· ááŹááŻááŹááș á á áșááŻááșááŸáŻ áá»á±áŹá·áááșážá áœáŹ
á áœáá·áșáá áșáá»áŸááșááŸáááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŻáá±áá ááŒáŻá áŻáá°áááŻá·á áá°ááźá áœáŹ ááŒá±áŹáááŻáá±ááŒáááșá
http://www.shwedaungtaung.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=205:2011-08-31-15-55-52&catid=81:myanmar-news&Itemid=427
kai
September 8, 2011 at 6:05 am
US Special Representative On Myanmar Tour Seeking Reforms, Reconciliation
(RTTNews) – The U.S. Special Representative and Policy Coordinator for Myanmar, Ambassador Derek Mitchell will depart on his first trip to the South-East Asian country in his position on Wednesday. During his trip, he looks forward to meeting with a full spectrum of Myanmar society, including government officials, members of political parties, local civil society organizations, and others.
His trip is intended to build upon U.S. dialogue and engagement toward shared goals of genuine reform, reconciliation, and development for the Burmese people, US State Department said in a statement.
Ambassador Mitchell will attend meetings in Nay Pyi Taw on September 9 and10. He will continue consultations in Rangoon during September 10-14.
From Myanmar, he will leave for Thailand and Indonesia. He will consult with officials in Bangkok on September 14-15, and in Jakarta on September 16-17.
by RTT Staff Writer
—
áĄáá±áááááș áĄáá°ážáááŻááșá áŹážááŸááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áááźážá ááș á áááș
áĄá±ážááČá· | ááŻááčááá°ážáá±á·á á ááșáááșááŹá áá áááș áááá ááŻááŸá áș áá ááŹááź áá áááá áș
áá»ááșážáááŻááș (áááčááá) á á áĄáá±áááááș áĄá ááŻážáá ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșáᏠáĄáá°ážáááŻááșá áŹážááŸááșááŸáá·áș áá°áá«áááŸáááŸááŻááșážáá±ážááŸá°ážáá áčá áᏠááČáááșááș áá»á± áá áșáá»áČááș (Derek J. Mitchell) á ááááĄááŒáááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáᶠááááșááŒáŹ áááźážá ááș áĄááœááș ááŻááčááá°ážáá±á·ááœááș á áááșáááŻááșááŒáź ááŒá áșáááșá
áĄáá±áááááș áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáá±áž ááŹáá áĄááșáčáá«áá±á·á ááŻááșááŒááșáá»ááșááœááș âá á áșááŸááșáá±áŹ ááŒáŻááŒááșááŒá±áŹááșážááČáá±ážá áĄáá»ááŻážááŹážááŒááșáááșááá·áșááŒááșáá±ážááŸáá·áș ááŒááșááŹáá°ááŻá áááŻážáááșááœá¶á·ááŒááŻážááŸáŻ áá°áá±áŹ áá°áá»áŸá áœáŹ áááșáá¶ááŹážááá·áș áááșážáááŻááșáá»áŹážáááŻá·áá±áŹááșá á±áááș ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŸáŻááŸáá·áș ááááœá±á·ááŸáŻáá»áŹáž áá±áŹááșááœááșááœáŹážáááșâáᯠáá±áŹáșááŒááŹážáááșá
áááșážáááș áá¶áĄáááșááŒáźáž áĄááá·áșááŸááááșáᯠáĄáá±áááááș áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáá±ážááŹáá ááŒá±ááŒáŹááŹážáááșá áááá ááŻááŸá áș á ááșáááșááŹáááœááș ááŒááșáᏠá á áșáááșá áĄáŹááŹááááșážááá·áșáá±áŹááș áĄáá±áááááșáááŻááșáá¶á ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶
ááŸá áá¶áĄáááșááᯠááŒááșáááșáá±á«áșáá°ááŒáźáž áá¶ááááș áááșáá¶áá±ážááᯠáĄááá·áș
áá»áŸá±áŹá·áá»ááŹážááČá·áááșá
http://www.irrawaddy.org/bur/index.php/news/7243-2011-09-07-05-33-04
MaMa
September 9, 2011 at 10:55 pm
ááŻááșááŻááșáááŻáșááșá ááșáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș ááœááșážááŻááșáááŻááșá ááșáĄáá»ááŻá· (áá±ážáá«áž ááŸáá·áș CMP) áááŻá·ááᯠáá±ááŒááșáá±áŹáș áááșá ááŹááááŻááČ áááŻáž ááááșáááČá·áááŻá·áááș áááșááŻááșááœááș áá»áŸá±áŹááșááŹážáááŻááșáá±áŹá·áááșáᯠááááŸáááá«áááșá
áááŻááșáááșáá»á±áŹáșááźáĄá±áŹááșááŻ
September 10, 2011 at 9:16 am
ááŒááșááŹááááșážááá±ážáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶á áááŻáĄááșáá»ááș – ááœááșážáĄá±áŹááșáá»á±áŹáș
á ááșáááșááŹá á áááșáá±á·ááŻááș áá°áá±á០Telegraph áĄáœááșáááŻááșážááááșážá áŹááœááș ááœáŸá±ááźááŒááŻá·ááŸáá±á áá±ážáá áșáĄáź áᏠ(David Eimer) áááŻáá° áá±ážááŹážáááŻááșááá·áș âááŒááșááŹááááșážááá±ážáá»áŹáž áááŻááșááááŻá·áááźážáá»áŹážáĄááŒá áș áĄáááșáž áĄáá»ááș á á±áááŻááșážáá¶áááŒááșážâ (Burmaâs women forced to be Chinese Brides) áĄáááșááŸáá·áș ááááșážáá±áŹááșážáá«áž áááŻááșááᯠáááșááŸáŻáááŻááșááá«áááșá
áá°á·áá±áŹááșážáá«ážáĄáááŻáá»áŻááșáááŻáá±áŹááșááá»áŸááș áááŻááșááŒááșááŒáźážá âááá±ážááá±áŹááșâ áá±á«áșáá áźáĄá áááŻááșááááŹáž á áŻáá»áŹáž ááá±ážááá±áŹááș áááŒáźážáá»áŸááș ááŹážááŒá±áŹááᯠáááŹáááșá០áĄáááŻáĄáá»á±áŹááș ááŒááșááŒáźážááŒá áșáááŒáá·áș áááŻááșáá ááŹážá áŻáá»áŹáž ááááșážááá±ážáááș áá±áŹááșá»áŹážáá±ážáááŻáᏠááĄá±áŹááș ááŒááŻážá áŹážáá°ááŒáááŒáá·áș áá±áŹááșá»áŹážáŠážáá±ááŸáá·áș ááááșáž ááŠážáá± áĄáá»ááŻážáĄá áŹážááœáŹáááŸáŻ ááŒá áșááŹááČá·áááșá ááá·áșááŸááșážááŒá±áĄá áá±áŹááșá»áŹážáá±áž ááá ááœáŹážááŒááșáááŻááșáž ááááșážááá±áž ááá ááá·áșáᏠááœáŹážááŒááșááá·áșáĄááœááș áááŻááșáá°ááŸáŻáá±ážááááčáá¶áĄáááșáááźá០ááŻááșááŒááșááá·áș ááá·áșááŸááșážáá»ááșáĄá áááá ááŻááŸá áșááœááș áááŻááșáá±áŹááșá»áŹáž áá áááșážáááŻá·áĄááœááș áááșáááșáá°áááŻááșááá·áș áááŹážáááŸááá°áááŒá áșáááșá
áááŻááșá ááᯠâááá±ážááá±áŹááșáá±á«áșáá áźâ áĄá áá±áŹááșá»áŹážááááșážá áĄáá»ááŻážáĄá áŹážáááźáá»áŸááŸáŻááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááááșážáááŸáŹážáá«áž ááŸáŻáááșááᯠáááŻááșáááŻááșáᶠáá¶á áŹážáá±ááááșá áááŻáááŻáĄááșáá»ááșááᯠáááŹážáááș á á±á·á ááșááŒá±áŹááșážáááșážááŒááșážááŒáá·áș áááșáááș áá°áááŻááșáá±áŹáá°áá»áŹáž ááŸááá±áŹáșáááșáž áááŻáááșážáááșážááŒáá·áș áááááŻááșáá°áá»áŹážá áááŹážá„ááá±áá±áŹááșáĄááŒááșá០áááșážáááșáž áá»áŹážááᯠáĄááŻá¶ážáá»ááŹááŒáááșáᯠáá°áááșá ááᯠáááșáá±áŹááșááŻá¶ážá០HIV/ AIDS ááŸáá·áș áá°ááŻááșáá°ážááŸáŻ ááá»á±áŹááșáá±áž ááŹáááșáᶠáá±ážáá áșáááșážáááŻážááș (David Feingold) á áááŻáááșá
áá°áááș áááá ááŻááŸá áșá ááŻááșááŻááșááČá·áá±áŹ ááááșážááá±áŹááșážáááșáá±ážáĄááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŻááșáá°ážááČá·ááá·áș áá«áááŻááșááŹááŒá áș áááșá áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș ááááŻá·áááźáž (áááŹáž) áĄááŒá áș áĄáááșážáĄáá»ááș ááŻááșáááŻááșážááŒááșážáá¶ááá° ááááșážááá±ážáĄáá»áŹážá ᯠááŹááŹáááŻááșáá¶áááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŒá áșáááșáᯠáá°ááááŻáááșá
áá±ážáá áșá ááŻááčáááŹááŹáááșáá»áŹážáááșážááŒá áș á á áșáĄáŹááŹááŸááșá áá áșááŒáá·áș áĄáŻááșáá»áŻááșáá±áá°áá»áŹážáááșážááŒá áșáá±áŹá áá±á«ááșááźáž áááŻááșááŹááœááșáááșáž áĄááœááșáá«áááŹááŻá¶áá±áŹ áááșááŒá±áŹááșááŒá±áŹááș ááŒááșááŹá á áșáááŻááșáá»áŻááșáá»áŹážáááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŸá ᥠáá»ááŻážáááźážáá»áŹáž áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶áááŻá· áĄáá±áŹááșážá áŹážáá¶áááŒááșážá áĄááááááŹážáá¶áá»áŹážáĄááŒá áș áá±áŹááșááŒááČá·áááșá
ááœááșáááșážá áœáŹ ááááŸáááșáĄáŻááșáá»áŻááșááŸáŻááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááŒááșáá°áá»áŹáž áááșááœááșáá±á«ááșážáá«ážááŹááŒáźáž á áźážááœáŹážáá±ážááœááșáááșážá áœáŹ áááá·áșáá»ááŹááŸáŻ ááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááŒááșááŹááááșážááá±ážáá»áŹáž áá°áĄáá±áŹááșážáĄáááșááœáČá áŹážáá»áŹážá áá±ážááœááșááœááșážáááŻá· áá»áá±áŹááșááŹááááșáᯠáá±áŹááșááŒááČá·áááșá á áźážááœáŹážáá±ážá áá°ááŸáŻáá±ážá áá»ááșážááŹáá±ážá áááŹáá±áž áĄá á áĄááŹáᏠáááá·áșáá»ááŸáŻááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááŻááșááŻááș ááŻááșááŸáŻ áá»áááșážááŹááŒáźáž áĄá áŹáá±á áŹááŸáŹážáá«áž ááŒááșáááșááŸáŻáááŻáá« ááŒáŻá¶ááœá±á·ááŹáááá·áșáĄááœááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶á០áĄáá»ááŻáž áááźážáá»áŹáž áĄá áŹáá±á áŹááŸáŹáááșáĄááœááșáááșážáá±áŹááșážá ááááŹážá áŻáá±áŹááșáá¶á·áááșáĄááœááșáááșážáá±áŹááșáž áááŻááșáááŻááșáᶠáááŻá· ááœááșááŒááá·áșáĄáá« áá°ááœáČá áŹážáá»áŹážá ááŒááșáá±ážáááŹážáá»áŹážáááșááœááșážáááŻá· áááșáááșážááŒáááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŻáááșá ááŒááș ááŹááŒááșá០áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáĄáá»áŹážá áŻááŸáŹ áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶áááŻá· áá°ááŻááșáá°ážáá°áá»áŹážá áááŻá·ááŒááșážáá¶áááŒáźážáá±áŹááș áĄáááșážáĄáá»ááș á ááŹážáĄááŒá áș áá±á«ááșážáááșážáá¶áááŒááșážááŸáá·áș áĄááŻá¶ážáááșááœáŹážááŒááááșáᯠáá°á áááŻáááșá
áááŻááșááŒááșááœááș áááŻážááœááșážááŹáá±áŹ áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážááá±áŹááșá áááșáááŻážáááș ááœááș áááá ááŸáá·áș áá,ááá áĄáá ááŸáááŒáźáž áá°áá áĄáá»ááŻážáĄá áŹážá áĄáááșá áĄááŹážáĄáááșá áá»ááșááŸáŹááœááșááŒááșáá±áŹááșážáá»áŸááș áá±áŹááșážááá±áŹááș áá±ážáá±áž áá¶ááááșá á ááŹáááșáá±á«ááșááŸáá·áș á áá á០áá±á«ááș ááá á áĄáá áá±ážáá±á«ááșáááșá
áááŻážáááŹážáĄááŒá±á ááŻááș ááá»ááșáĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáĄááœáČá·á០ááŻááșááŒááșáá»ááșááœááș áá±áŹááșážá áŹážáá¶ááá±áŹ ááŒááșááŹááááșážááá±ážáá»áŹážá áá % áááș áĄáááș áá ááŸá áșáĄá±áŹááșááŒá áșáááșáᯠáááŻáááșá âáá±áŹááșá»áŹážááœá±á áá°áááŻá·áĄááœááș ááá±ážááœá±áž áá±ážáááŻááșááá·áș áá»ááșážááŹáááșá áœááșážááŒáźáž áĄáááșáĄááœááșáááșááČá· ááááșážááá±ážááœá± áááŻááŹážáááșâ áᯠáá°áááșááŒááșáááșááŸá ááááș áá°ááŻááșáá°ážááŸáŻáááŻááșáá»ááșáá±ážáĄááœáČá·áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááș áá»á°ááźááŹááá áșá áááŻáááșá
âááááșážááá±ážááœá±ááᯠááá±ážááœá±ážáá±ážáááŻá· á ááșáááŻáááŻááČ ááá±áŹááŹážááŒáááșâ áᯠáá°áá ááŸááșáá»ááșáá±ážááČá·áá« áááșá
á€áá±áŹááșážáá«ážáĄá ááᯠááŒááșááŹááŒááșá០áá ááŸá áșáááźážáĄááœááșááœááș ááŒááșáá±ážááœáČáá¶áááá·áș ááá±ážá âáĄáâ (áááŻááșážáááșáž áá°ááŒá áșááŻá¶ááááș) ááŸáá·áșá ááŒáźáž áááșážááᯠáááŻááșááááŹážá áŻáá áŻáá¶ááœááș ááŒááșáá±ážááœáČáá°áá»áŹážá áá±áŹááșážá áŹážááČá·ááŒáźáž áááșážáááŻá·á áĄáááș áá áĄááœááș ááŹážááŸáá·áș áá±ážá áŹážáááș ááŒá¶á ááșááČá·áá±áŹáșáááșáž áá±áŹááșááŻá¶áž á ááŸá áșáĄááŒáŹ áááŻááșááŻááááșáá»áŹážá ááŸááșááŻá¶áááșá á áșáá±ážááá·áșáĄáá«ááœááș áá°ááááș áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáá°ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áá±á«áșááœááșááœáŹážááŒáźáž ááŒááșááŹááŒááșáááŻá· ááŒááșááœáá·áș áááČá·ááŒááșážááŒá áșáááșáᯠáĄááŻá¶ážáááșááŹážáááșá ááŒááșááŹááááșážááá±ážáá»áŹážááᯠáá±ážáááșááœááș áááșáá±áŹááșážá áŹážááŸáá»áŹáž ááᯠáááșáááșá á±ááŒáźáž ááááșáááșááŒááșááá»ááș ááŒá±áŹááșáá±áá¶áááș áá±áŹááșážáá»ááá·áș áá±ááŹáá»áŹážáááșážááŸáááŒá±áŹááșáž ááᯠáá±áŹááșážáá«ážááœááș áá±ážááŹážááŹážáááŒáá·áș ááŻááșááŸáŻááșáá»á±áŹááșááŒáŹážá áᏠáá°áááŻá·ááááᯠáááŻááșáá»ááșážá áŹááááČá·áá«áááșá áá áᏠá ᯠáá±ááșááźáááŻážáááșáá±áá±áŹ áá°á·ááááŻááșážáááș ááááșáááșá áá»áœááșáá±áŹááșážáá»áœááșáááșá áá áșááźáááŻá· ááŒááșáá±áŹááșáá±ááŒáź ááŹážáᯠáá±ážááœááșážááŻááșááá±áŹá·áááᯠááŒá áșáá±áá«áááșá
ááááŻá¶ážáĄáŹážááŒáá·áș áá»áŻááșáááŒá±áŹááá»áŸááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áááș áĄáŹááŸáááŻááșáá¶áá»áŹážááŒáŹážááœááș ááœááșáááșáá±áž ááá«á á០áááá ááŻááŸá áș ááááŻááșááźáĄáá áĄááŸá±á·áá±áŹááșáĄáŹááŸá ááŒááșáááœáá·áșá áĄáŹááŸáááŻááșá á áá«ážáá»ááș áááșážáááŻááșáᯠáááșá áŹážáá±á«áșáá¶áááá·áș áááșá áá«ážáĄááœááșááŻá¶ážáááŻááșáá¶ááá áĄáááșááźážážáá»ááșážáááŻááșáá¶áá»áŹážá áĄáŹážáá»áá±ážá áŹážáá±áŹááșáá±áŹ áĄááá·áșááŒáá·áșáááčááááŻááș áááŹáááșáá»áŹáž ááœá±ážááŻááșáᏠáááșááŻááșááááčááŹááááčáá¶áááčááááŻááșááŒáźáž ááŸáááá·áș áĄááŸáááșáĄááŻááșááŒáźážááČá·áá±áŹ áááŻááșáá¶ááá០áááčááŹá·áĄáááșážááČááŻá¶ážáááŻááșáá¶áááááŻá· áááá ááŻááŸá áșááœááș áá»áá±áŹááșááœáŹážááČá·áááŒááșážáááșáááșážáá±áŹááșážá ááá±á·áĄáá áááčááŹá ááááŸáááșááŸáŻ áĄááŒááșážáááșááŻá¶ážá áá°á·áĄááœáá·áșáĄáá±ážáĄáá»ááŻážáá±áŹááșááŻá¶ážáááŻááșáá¶áĄááŒá áș áĄááŒá áșáááșáá¶áá±ááááșááŸáŹ á á áș áĄáŹááŹááŸááșá áá áșááŒá±áŹáá·áșááŒá áșáááșá ááááșá áááŻáááŹážáááŻááșáá¶ááᯠááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŹážáá»áŹážá âááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŒáźážâ áá°á ᥠáááșáá±áž áĄááŒááșáá±áž ááŸáŻááșáá»ááŒáááșá ááá±á· áĄáááșááźážáá»ááșáž áááŻážáááŹážáááŻááșáá¶á áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶á ááŻááŹážááŒááșáááŻá·ááœááșááŸá áá±áŹ ááŹáá»áŹážáááș ááŒááșááŹáĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáĄáá»áŹážá áŻááŒá áșáááᯠááŒááșááŹááŒááșááœááșážááááșáž áááŹážááááș ááŹáá»áŹáž áá±áŹááșáž ááŸáá·áșáá»áźá ááŒááŻá·áááșáááŻááșážáĄáááŻááș áĄááŸáááșáááșážáá»áŹážá ááŹááŹáĄááŻáá±á áááŻááșááááșáá»áŹážááœááș ááŸááá±ááŒááŒáźááŒá áșáááșá áĄáŹ ááŹáá°ážá á áșáááŻááșáá»áŹážá áĄááčáá áœáČááŒáźážááŹážááœááșážááŸáŻááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááŹáááŻááșáá¶áááááŻá· áá±áŹááșáá±ááŒááșážááᯠááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŸá áááșáá° ááá»áŸ áááŹážááźážáááŻááșáá«á
áááŻááșááŒááșá áááŹážáááŻáĄááșááŸáŻáĄá áá±áŹááșážá áŹážáá¶ááá±áŹ ááááșážááá±ážáá»áŹážááœááș áá°áá»ááșážááŹáááŹáááș áááŻááș áá»áŹážá áááŹážááŒá áșáááŻá·áááș áááŻááșáááșáááŹážáá»áŹážá áĄááŒáá·áșáᶠáĄááŻááșáá»áœááșáááŹážááŒá áșáááŻá·á áá»áŹážáá«áááșá áááŻááááșáž ááá±ážáá»áŹážáááș áááŻáá°á ááœá±ážááŹážááŒáá·áșáááșážáá±ážáᏠáááŹážáĄááŒá áșáááșážáá±áŹááșážá ááááááŹáááᯠáááșáá°ááŹáž áá°á áááááŒá áșáá°á áĄá á±áá¶áĄááŒá áșáááșážáá±áŹááșáž áĄááŻááșáĄáá»áœá±ážááŒáŻáááșáž áĄááŸáááșá ááșáá¶ááŒáźáž áá±áááŻááșááááșá áááá áááșáá±ááŹáá±áŹááșáá±áááșá áááșáá°á·ááᯠáĄáá°áĄááźáá±áŹááșážááááșááᯠáááááŒáá»á±á áááŻááșááááŹážá áŻá áĄáááș áá»áœááșááŻááșáááșáž ááœááșáááșážáááŒááșááá·áșáĄáá« áááááááŻááșáááŻááș áĄááŻá¶ážá áźáááșááœáŹážáááșááŒáááșá áááșááŹááŻá¶áž áááŻáž áááșáá±ážáá±áŹááșá áĄááŻá¶ážá áźáááșááŒááșážááᯠáĄáá»áŹážááŻá¶áž áĄááŻá¶ážááŒáŻááŒááșážááŒáá·áș ááŒá±ááœáČá áœáŹ áááĄááŻá¶ážáááșááœáŹážááŒá áááșá
áááŻááșááŒááșáááș ááŒááșááŹááŒááșááᯠáá°áá»ááŻážáĄá áá«ážááŒááŻáááșáááŻáááșááŸáŹ á áááșáá°ážáááșáááŻááșáá»á±á ááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŸá á áááșááŒá±á ááá»ááșáááșááŒá±á ááŸááșážáááșááŒá±áááŻá·ááœááș áááŻááșááŒááșá០áááœá±á·ááœá±á·ááŒá±áŹááșážááŹáá°áá»áŹáž áááá ááŻááŸá áșáá±áŹááș áááŻááșážáááșáááșáĄáá±ááŸáá·áșáááș áááșážáá»áźá ááŸááá±ááŒáźááŒá áșáááșá
áááŻá·áĄááŒááș áááŻááșááŒááșá ááááșážááá±ážáááŻáĄááșáá»ááșáááș áááŸá áșáááșáááŸá áș áááŻážááœáŹážáá»áŹážááŒáŹážááŹáááșááŸáŹ ááŒá±ááŒáźáž áááșáááșáááœáČááŒá áșáááșá áááŻáááŻáĄááșáá»ááșááᯠááŒáá·áșáááșážáá±ážáááá·áșáĄááááááŻááșáá¶ááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáᶠááŒá áșáá±ááŒááșáááșá áĄáááșááŒá±áŹáá·áșáááŻáá±áŹáș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áááș áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááᯠááŸáźáááŻáá±áááá·áșáĄááá·áșáááŻá· áááœá±á·ááœá±á· áá»áá±áŹááș áá»ááșááŸááá±áŹááŒá±áŹáá·áșááŒá áșáááșá
(á) áááŻááșááᯠáĄáŹážáááŻážá ááŻáááááčáá០áĄáá±ážáá°ááá¶ááĄá±áŹááș áááŻááșáĄáááŻáá» á§ááŹáááź ááŒá áșááŻá¶ áá±ááŹáᏠáááșáá±áŹááșáá±ážááᯠááŒááșáá°áá»áŹáž ááŹážáá±ááá·áșááŒáŹážá០áĄáááșážáĄáá»ááș ááŻááșáá±áŹááșáááș á ááŻááșážááŒááșážáá»ááșááŸáááŒááșážá
(á) áááșážááČááœáČáá±áá±áá±áŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŒá áșáááŒáá·áș áááááááșáá»ááșážááŹáá±áŹ áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶á áá áșáááŻáá»áŸááș áá áșá áá»á±áŹááș áááŻáá»áŸááș áá»á±áŹááșá ááŹááșááœá±á·áááŻáá»áŸááș ááŹááșááœá±á·á áá±áŹááșááŻá¶áž ááááșážááááŻáá»áŸááș ááááșážááá±ážááᯠáá±ážááá±áŹá·ááá·áș áĄáá± áĄááŹážááŒá áșáááșá
ááŹááá·áș áááá ááŻááŸá áșááœááș áá°áá»ááŻáá°ááœááș áááŻááșáá±áŹááșá»áŹáž áá áááșážáááș áááșážáááŻá·á ááœá±ážááŹážááŹá ááŒá± áá»á±áŹááșáááșáĄááœááșáááșážáá±áŹááșážá áá»ááŻážááœáŹážáááșáĄááœááșáááșážáá±áŹááșážá áá±ážáá»ááŻáá»ááŻááŸáá·áșááááŻááșáá±áŹ ááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŸ áĄ áá»ááŻážáááźážáá±ážáá»áŹážááᯠáŠážááŸáá·áșááŹáá±áááá·áșáááșá áá°ááœáČá áŹážáá»áŹážáĄááœááș áĄááœááșááŒáźážááŹážáá±áŹ âááááŻážáááźážáá±áž ááœááșâ áááș ááŹážááźážáá±ááá·áșááŒáŹážá០áááœáČáááœá± áááŻáááŻááŒáźážááŹážááŹáááșááŸáŹ ááŒá±ááŒáźážáááșáááșáááœáČáááș ááŒá áșáááșá áááŻááșááŒááșááŒáźážááœááș ááŒáá·áșáááșááŹáá»áŹážááᯠáĄá ááŻážáá០áááŹážáááșááŒá áșá á±á áááŹážááááșááŒá áșá á± áááșááœááșááœáá·áșááááŻážááœáŹáž ááŹáá±áŹ áá°ááœááșáá±áŹááșá»áŹážáá»áŹáž áĄáŹááŹáááčáááᯠááá±á«ááșááœáČá á±áááș ááááșážáá»áŻááșáááŻá· ááŻááșáá±áŹááșáá±áŹááșážááŻááș áá±áŹááșááŹáááŻááșááœááșááŸááááșá áááŻáááŻá·ááŻááșááŹáá«á áááŻážáááŹážáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșážáááșážáá°áá»áŹážáĄáá»áŹážá ᯠâááŹâ ááŒá áș áá±ááá·áșáááșážáá° áááșážáááŻááșááŹáááșážáá»áŹážááœááșáááșáž ááŒááșááŹáĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáá»áŹážáᏠáĄáá»áŹážá áŻáĄááŒá áș ááœá±á·ááŒááșááááŻááș ááœááșááŸááá±áááșá
áááŻáĄááŒá áșááᯠááŹááœááșáááșááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áááș áááŻááșá áĄááŸáźáĄáááŻáááșážáá±áŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŒá áșáááș áááŻáĄááșáá±áááșá ááź áááŻááá±á áźáááșážáá» ááœááșáááșáá±áŹáááŻááșáá¶áĄááŒá áș ááá°áá±áŹááșáááŻááșáá»áŸááș á á áșáá»áœááșááááŸáá±á áááŻááșážááá«áž áĄáááșááźážáá»ááșáž áááŻááșáá»áœááșááŒá áșáááș áááșááááșážááŹáááŻáá±áŹá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž áá»ááŻážáá»á áșááŒááșááŹáá»áŹážá áĄáá°ážáááŒáá·áș áááŻááșážáá»á áșááŒááșáá»á áșá áááș ááŸááá±áŹ áááșááá±áŹáșáááŻááșáá»áŻááșá áĄááŒááșáááșááŹážáá»áŹážááᯠááááá±ážááŸááŻážáá±áŹáșáááŻááșááá«áááșá ááá±á·ááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŒáźáž ááᯠáááșáááșáááș áá»ááŻážáá»á áșá áááșááŸááá±áŹ áááŻááșáá»áŻááșá áááŻááșááŸá°ážá áááŻááșááŒáźážá áĄááŒááșáááșááŹážáá»áŹáž áá°ážáá±á«ááșážáá«áááșááŸáŻááŸááááŻá· ᥠáá°ážáááŻáá«áááșá ááŒááŻááșáá°ááœááșážáá»áŸááș ááœá±á·áááŻááșáá«áááșá
áĄáŹážááŻá¶ážáááŻáá±ážá áŹážáá»ááș …
ááœááșážáĄá±áŹááșáá»á±áŹáș
á ááșáááșááŹá á áááș
ááŸááșáá»ááș á á ááŒáá·áșáááșááŹáᯠáááŻá¶ážááČ âááŹâ áᯠááŻá¶ážááŸáŻááșážáááŒááșážááŸáŹ áááŻááșáá»áŻááșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áááá·áșááœááșážáĄá âááŹáááșáááŻááșáá¶ááŒáźáž ááŒá áșááœáŹážááŸáŹááČâ áááŻááá·áșá ááŹážááᯠáĄááŸááșáá á±áááŻá ááŒá áșáá«áááșá ááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŒáźážááŒá áșáĄá±áŹááș áááșáá°ááœá±á ááŻááșáá±ááŒááááșážá
http://drlunswe.blogspot.com/
áááŻááșáááșáá»á±áŹáșááźáĄá±áŹááșááŻ
September 10, 2011 at 11:04 am
áĄááŻá¶ážáá»áá¶ááááșááᯠáá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááș áááŸáŻ – á§ááŹáááź Friday, 09 September 2011 16:39 .
ááŒááșááŹáĄá ááŻážáá áĄááŻá¶ážáá»ááŸáŻáááŻáá¶áá±áááŒááșáž áááŸáááŒá±áŹááșáž ááźáááŻááá±á áź áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááș áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșá ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááŻááșáááșáᯠááœááșáááșááČá· áĄáŹááŸáĄáᶠ(RFA) á áĄááșááŹáááș á áŹáá»ááșááŸáŹááœááș ááŒáŹáááá±ážáá±á·á áá±áŹáșááŒááŹážáááșá
áááŒáŹáá±ážááźá áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșááŸáá·áș áĄá ááŻážááá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááșáá»áŹáž ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááŒááŒáźážáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáž ááááŹáááșááŸáŹážááá·áș ááŒá±áŹááșážááČ áááŻážáááșááŸáŻáá»áŹáž ááŒá áșáá±á«áșáááŹáá±ážáááŒáá·áș áááŻáááŻá·ááŻá¶ážáááșáá±ááŒáá»áááșááœááș áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșá ááŻá¶á·ááŒááșáá»ááș áá±á«áșáá±á«ááșááŹááŒááșáž ááŒá áșáááșá
âáĄááŻá¶ážáá»áá¶áá±ááááșáááŻá· áááŒááșáá«áá°ážá áá°ážááœáČááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááŻááșáá±áŹááșáááșáááŻá· ááŒááșáá«áááșâ áᯠRFA ááááááșáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áĄáá±ážáĄááŒá± áááčááááŻááœááș áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșá ááŒá±áŹáááŻááșáááșá
ááŒááșááœááșážááŒááșá áááĄáŹážáá±ážááŸáŻáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áááșáááŻááșáá±áááá·áșáĄá ááŻážáá áĄááŻá¶ážáá»áᶠááŒá áșááœáŹážáááșáááŻáááșáž á ááŻážááááșááŒááșáž áááŸááᯠáááŻáááșá
âááááșááČ áĄááŻá¶ážáá»áá¶ááááș áááŻáááșáá±áŹááșá០áááŻááșážááŒááș áĄááœááș áĄááŻá¶ážáá»áá¶ááááșáááŻáááș áááŸá áșááŒááŻá·á áᏠáĄááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŸááá«áá°ážá ááŻá¶ááŒááșáá»ááșáĄááœááș áááșááŻááșááœáŹážááŸáŹ ááŒá áșáá«áááșâ áᯠáá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșá áááŻáááșá
áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșáááș áááŻááșážááŒááșááŸáá·áș áá°áá»ááŻážáĄáá±á«áș áá áčá áŹáá±áŹááșáááș áááŻááșáᯠááŻá¶ááŒááșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááčááźááŹááááŻááș áĄáá»ááŻážááŹáž ááźáááŻááá±á áź áĄááœáČá·áá»áŻááș á ááșážááŻá¶ážáá±áž áá±áŹáșáááźáááș áá±á«áșááŒáá·áșááŒáá·áșáĄá±ážá á§ááŹáááźáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹáááșá
âáááșážááŒá±áŹááșážááŸááș áá±á«áșááŹáĄá±áŹááș ááźááœááș ááŒá¶áááŒáźáž ááŻááșáá±ááČá·ááŹááᯠáá»ááááŻá·á áá±áŹááșáá¶ááŒáźážáá±áŹá· áĄáááŻááșážáĄáᏠáááŻáĄáá áá¶á·áááŻážáá±ážááœáŹážááááșâ áᯠáá±á«áșááŒáá·áșááŒáá·áșáĄá±ážá áááŻáááșá
ááŒáźážááČá·ááá·áș á á áĄááœááșáž áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșáááș áááčáááŠážááááșážá áááșá áĄááŻááșáááŹáž áááșááŒáźáž áŠážáĄá±áŹááșááŒááșáááŻá·ááŸáá·áș ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ á ááŹážááŒá±áŹááČá·áááșá ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŸáŻáĄááŒá±áŹááșážáĄáᏠáĄáá±ážá áááș ááŸáá·áș ááá±áŹáá°ááźáá»ááșáá»áŹážááᯠááŸá áșáááșá ááŻá¶ážá ááŻááșááŒááșááŒááșáž áááŸááá±ážáá±á
áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșááŸáá·áș áááčáá ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááŸáŻ ááŸáá·áș áááșáááșá áĄá ááŻážáááźááźááŹáá»áŹážá ááŻááșááŒááșááŹááœááș ááá° ááœáČááœáČáá»ááșáá»áŹážááᯠááŸá±áŹááșááŸáŹážááŒáźáž áá°ááźáá»ááșáá»áŹážááᯠáááŻááșážááŒááș áĄáá»ááŻážá áźážááœáŹážáĄááœááș áááșááœáČááŻááșáá±áŹááșááœáŹážáááș áᯠáá±áŹáșááŒááŹážáááșá
áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșááááșáž ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááŸáŻááŸáá·áș áááșáááșá áá»á±áááșáĄáŹážáááŸáŻááŸáááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááČá·áááșá
ááŒááșááŹáĄá ááŻážáá áááá ááŻááŸá áș áĄáŹááźáᶠáá±á«áș áĄááŸá±á·áá±áŹááșáĄáŹááŸáááŻááșáá¶áá»áŹážáĄáááșážá áĄááŸáá·áșáá» á„ááčáááčá ááŹáá°áž ááááŻáááŒáá·áș áááŻááșáá¶ááᏠáááĄáŹáž áá»á±áŹá·áááșážá á±áááș ááźáááŻááá±á áź áá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááș áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșááŸáá·áș ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááŒááŒááșáž ááŒá áșáááŻááșáááșáᯠáááŻááșáá¶áá±áž áá±á·ááŹáá°ááá»ááŻá·á ááŒá±áŹáááŻáá±ááŒáááșá
http://www.bur.irrawaddy.org/index.php/news/7267-2011-09-09-09-45-22
……………………………………….
………………………………………
áá°áá»áŹážáá±áŹá·ááááá°áž
( âááááșááČ áĄááŻá¶ážáá»áá¶ááááș áááŻáááșáá±áŹááșá០áááŻááșážááŒááș áĄááœááș áĄááŻá¶ážáá»áá¶ááááșáááŻáááș áááŸá áșááŒááŻá·á áᏠáĄááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŸááá«áá°ážá ááŻá¶ááŒááșáá»ááșáĄááœááș áááșááŻááșááœáŹážááŸáŹ ááŒá áșáá«áááșâ )
ááźá ááŹážá áŻáá±ážá áá»áŻááșáĄááœááșáá±áŹá· áááșáááááș
áááŹááŒááșááŹáž
September 11, 2011 at 11:06 pm
ááááșááČááŹáž ..
ááááșááČ áááŻá·áááŻááșáá¶ááĄáČááźáááŻááŒá áșáá±ááŒáźááŹáž
etone
September 13, 2011 at 9:10 am
http://www.planet.com.mm/news/read.cfm/id/17973
áááá áșáááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș ááœáŹááŹážáá»áŹážáááș áá°ážáá°ážááŒáŹážááŒáŹáž ááŒáźážááŹážááŸááá·áș
áááá»á±áŹááșážááŒáźáž áá áșáá±áŹááșááᯠáááșážááźážáááŻááșááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááŸáááááșá
APááááșážááŹáá ááááșá áĄááŒáźážááŻá¶ážááœá±á·ááŸááááá·áș áááá»á±áŹááșážáᯠáá°ááááá·áș (á .á )ááźááŹ
áĄááŸááșááŸááá±áŹ á©á ááŒá±ážáá»áááŻááșáá¶á ááČááșá áșááœááș ááœá±á·ááŸáááČá·ááá·áș áááčááá«ááŒáźážáááș
áááŻáááá»á±áŹááșážááźážááŒáźážá áááŻáááŻááŒáźážááŹážááŒá±áŹááșáž áá±áŹáșááŒááČá·áááșá
áááŻáááșážááźážááááá±áŹ ááœáŹážááœáŹážáááčááá«ááŒáźážáááș áĄááŸááș(á.á)ááźááŹááŸáááŹ
áááŻááșáĄáá±ážáá»áááș (ááá)ááźáááŻááááșáá»áŸ ááŸááááŻááșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá ááááșá
á©á ááŒá±ážáá»ááœááș áááșážááááČá·áá±áŹ áááá»á±áŹááșážááŒáźážáááș áááșážáá áșááŸááșáááșáž á áŹáĄáŻááșááœááș
áááŹáčáá·áĄááŒáźážááŻá¶áž áááá»á±áŹááșážáĄááŒá áș á áŹáááșážááœááșáž áá±áŹáșááŒáá¶ááŹážáááŒáźáž
áááŻáááá áșáááŻááș áááá»á±áŹááșážá á á¶áá»áááșáá»ááŻážááœááș ááŸááá±áááșá
áááŻáááá»á±áŹááșážááŒáźážááᯠáááá áșáááŻááșááŸá áááŹá áááșáááșážáá»ááșáááŻááșáᏠá„áá»áŹááșáááŻá·
áááŻá·áá±áŹááșááŹážááŸááááș á áźá ááșáá±ááŒá±áŹááșážáááșáž ááááááșá
áá°ááŹáááș ááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáșáááș áá±áŹá·á áșáĄáźáááŻááźá áááșážáááá»á±áŹááșážááŒáźážáááș áá°áá áșáŠážáááŻ
áááŻááșáááŻááșáááșááŒááșááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž áá»ááșááŒááșáááșáá±áá»áŹáž ááŸáááŹážááŒáźáž
áá°áááŻááșááĄááœááșážá áá»á±áŹááșááŻá¶ážááČá·ááá·áș áá¶áá«áááș áá áșáŠážáááŻáááșáž
á áŹážáá±áŹááșááČá·áááșáᯠáá°ááááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒá±áŹáááŻááČá·áááșá áĄáźáááŻááźá ááŒáźážááŹážááŸáá±áŹ
áááá»á±áŹááșážááŒáźážááᯠáááŹáčáááŸáá·áș áááźážáááșáá»áŹážáĄáŹáž ááœáČáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáá±áž
áĄááŻá¶ážááŒáŻááŒááșážáááș ááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááșáá±ááá·áș áĄááŹáá áșááŻááᯠáĄáá»ááŻážááŒá áșááœááșážáĄá±áŹááș
áĄááŻá¶ážáá»ááŒááșážáᯠááŸááșáá»ááșááŒáŻááČá·áááșá
áá°ááŹáááșááŸáá·áș áĄááșááșáááșáááșááșááŹáááŻá· áĄááźážááœááș áá«áááșáá±á«ááșážáá»áŹážá áœáŹáá±áŹ
ááœáŹááŹážáá»áŹážá (á)áááșááŒáŹ ááŒá±ááŹáᶠááŸáŹááœá±ááŸáŻ ááŒáŻááŻááșááŒáźážáá±áŹááș
áááșážáááá»á±áŹááșážááŒáźážááᯠáááșážááźážáááŻááșááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșážáááșáž áĄáźáááŻááźá
ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááœáŹážáááșá
kai
September 14, 2011 at 1:52 am
Census: US poverty rate swells to nearly 1 in 6
áĄáá±áááááșááœá± ááœáČááŻááșááŒáź…
(AP) WASHINGTON â The Census Bureau reports the number of Americans in poverty jumped to 15.1 percent in 2010, a 27-year high.
About 46.2 million people, or nearly 1 in 6, were in poverty. That’s up from 43.6 million, or 14.3 percent, in 2009. It was the highest level since 1983.
The number of people lacking health insurance increased to 49.9 million, a new high after revisions were made to 2009 figures. Losses were due mostly to working-age Americans who lost employer-provided insurance in the weak economy. Main provisions of the health overhaul don’t take effect until 2014.
The statistics released Tuesday cover 2010, when U.S. unemployment averaged 9.6 percent, up from 9.3 percent the previous year.
The median â or midpoint â household income was $49,445, a 2.3 decline from 2009.
parlayar46
September 14, 2011 at 9:06 am
áĄáČáá«ááá±áŹá· áá°áá±áž áá°ážá á°ážáááŻá· áĄá±áŹáșááŹáá»ááŻážáááșáá«ááČá·á
US ááŸáŹ ááœáČáááșáááŻááČá· poverty point áĄááŸááșá áááŸá áșáá±á«áșááŹáááșáá±áŹááșááČáááŻáᏠáááŻááŻááĄááŒá áșááŒá±áŹáá±ážáá«áŠážá
áĄáááșá áŹáž áááșááœá±á áááŸá áșáá«ážáá±áŹááșážáááŻáááș ááŒááșááŹááœá±ááČá·ááᯠáá±ážááŹáá»á±áŹá·áá»á±áŹá·áá±áŹááșáááŻáá±áŹá· ááááșáá±áŹá·ááá»áŹážááŸáá°ážááČá
áĄáČáá«áááș áááșááá±áŹááșáááșááČá·áá° ááá»ááŻá· áĄááŻážáá áșáĄáááșáá áșááČá· US ááœáŹážáá±áááŻááșáááŻá· áĄááŻáĄáááș ááŒááŻážá áŹážááŹáá±áŹááșáááș áá»áŻááșáááŻá·áááŻááșáᶠáááșáá±áŹááșáá±áá»ááșá áᏠááá±áŹááșážááČáááŻáᏠáá±á«áșááœááșáááșá
kai
September 14, 2011 at 2:50 pm
For a family of four with two children, poverty means making less than $22,113 a year. The U.S. poverty threshold is $11,344 for a single adult younger than
65, and advocates have long pointed out that an income at that level amounts to even less for residents of the Bay Area, with its high cost of living.
Foreign Resident
September 26, 2011 at 2:24 pm
Dear Parlayar 46,
“áááŸá áșáá«ážáá±áŹááșážáááŻáááș ááŒááșááŹááœá±ááČá·ááᯠáá±ážááŹáá»á±áŹá·áá»á±áŹá·áá±áŹááșáááŻáá±áŹá·”
not ” áá±ážááŹáá»á±áŹá·áá»á±áŹá·áá±áŹááș ”
” 4120 US$/month “
kai
September 14, 2011 at 2:47 pm
áĄááșáčáá«, 13 á ááșáááșáᏠ2011
ááŹááŹáá±ážááœááșáááșááœáá·áș áĄáááŻážáá«ážááŻá¶ážáá»ááŻážáá±áŹááșááČá· á áááŻááșáá¶ááČááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŹáá«áááș
By áá±á«áșáááșáá»ááŻážáááș
ááźááŸá áșáĄááœááș áĄáá±áááááș áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáá±áž áááșááŒáźážááŹáá ááŻááșááŒááșááČá· ááŹááŹáá±ážááœááșáááșááœáá·áșáááŻáșááșáᏠááŸá áșáááșáááș áĄá áźáááșáá¶á ᏠááČááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áᏠáááŹáčááá±á«áșááŸáŹ ááŹááŹáá±ážááœááșáááșááœáá·áș áĄáááŻážáá«ážááŻá¶ážáá»ááŻážáá±á«ááșááČá· áááŻááșáá¶á áŹáááșážááŸáŹ áááŸá áșááááŻááČ áá«áááșáá±ááŒááșáá«áááșá ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŸáŹ ááááááŻááŸá áș áá¶ááŹá· áĄáá±ážáĄáááșážáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáž ááŻááčáááŹáᏠááŻááșážáá±áŹáșááŒáźážááœá±ááᯠáááŻáááŻááááŸáááșááŹááŒáźáž ááŹááČá·áá»áźááČá· áá¶ááŹááœá± áĄáá»ááșážáá»áá¶áá±áááČ ááŒá áșáááᯠáá°á áááșááœá±ááŒá áșááČá· áááŻáááșáá»áŹááœá±áááŻáááșáž áĄááŻáá áĄááááŸááșáááŒáŻáá±ážááČ ááá áșáááșááŹááŹáááș áááŻááșážáááșážááŹážááœá± áĄááœááșáááŻáááșáž áĄááœáá·áșáĄáá±áž ááááŻááșááœáá·áș ááœá± ááŻá¶ážááŸáŻá¶ážááŸáŻ ááŸááá±áááșáááŻá· áĄá áźáááșáá¶á áŹááČááŸáŹ áá±á«áșááŒááŹážáá«áááșá áĄááŒáá·áșáĄá áŻá¶ááᯠáá±á«áșáááșáá»ááŻážáááșá áááșááŒááŹážáá«áááșá
ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááᯠCPC áááŻá·áá±á«áșááČá· ááŹááŹáá±áž ááœááșáááșááœáá·áș áĄááŒááșážáĄáááșáá»ááŻážáá±á«ááșáá±ááČá· áááŻáșááșáá¶ááČááŸáŹ áááșáááșááá·áșááœááșážááŹážááŒáźáž ááźááŸá áșáĄááœááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻáșááșáá¶áĄáá«áĄáááș á áźááźá áź ááŸá áșáááŻáșááșáá¶ááČá· ááŹááŹáá±ážááœááșáááșááœáá·áș áá»ááŻážáá±á«ááșáá±ááŸáŻ áĄááŒáá·áșáĄá áŻá¶ááᯠáĄááșáčáá«áá±á· ááŻááșááŒááșááČá· áĄá áźáááșáá¶á áŹááŸáŹ áá±á«áșááŒááŹážáááșáááŻá· áĄáá±áááááșáááŻáșááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáá±áž áááșááŒáźážááŹá ááźáááŻááá±á áźá áá°á·áĄááœáá·áșáĄáá±ážááČá· áĄááŻááșáááŹážáááŻáșááșáᏠáááșáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáá±áž áááșááŒáźáž áááŻááșáááș áá±á«á·á áșá ááŹ(Michael Posner) áááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
âáááŻáșááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáá±ážáááșááŒáźáž ááááșáááșá áĄáá°ážá áááșáá°áááŻá·áá±áŹááșážááČá· áááŻáșááșáá¶áĄááŒá áș á áááŻáșááșáá¶ááᯠáááșááŸááșááČá·áá«áááșá ááźáááŻáșááșáá¶ááœá±ááá±áŹá· ááŒááșááŹá áááŻááșá áĄáźáá áșáááźážááŹážá áĄáźáááșá ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááźážááŹážá áá°áááșááČá· áĄá°ááááșáá áșá áááș áááŻááșáá¶ááœá±áá«á ááźáááŻáșááșáá¶ááœá±áĄáŹážááŻá¶ážááŸáŹ ááŹááŹáá±áž ááœááșáááșááœáá·áș áááŸááᏠááŸá áșááŹá ááŒáŹááŒáá·áșáá±ááŒáźááŒá áșáááᯠáááŻážáááŻážáá«ážáá«ážáááșáž áá»ááŻážáá±á«ááșáá±áᏠááœá±á·ááá«áááșá ááźáá»ááŻážáá±á«ááșááŸáŻááœá±ááᯠáĄá áźáááșáá¶á áŹááŸáŹ áĄááŒáá·áșáĄá áŻá¶áá±á«áșááŒááŹážáá«áááșáâ
áĄá áźáááșáá¶á áŹááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááČá· áááșáááșááŒáźáž áĄáááŻááșážáá±ážáááŻááșážááœáČ áááșááŒááŹážáá«áááșá áááŻááșáá¶ááœááșáž áá±ááĄáááŻááș ááŹááŹáá±áž áááŻážááœááșááŸáŻááᯠáááșážá á áșááŹážáááᯠááŻááčáááŹááŹáááș áá ááŹáááŻááșááŸáŻá¶ážááŸáááŒáźáž ááá áșáááșááČá· áá°á áááș á ááŹáááŻááșááŸáŻááșáž á áźáá±áŹááșááŸáááČá· ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŸáŹ áĄá ááŻážáááČá· ááŹááŹáá±ážáááŻááșáᏠáá±ážá áŹážáááŻááșááŹááŸáŻááČá· áá°á·áĄááœáČá·áĄá ááșážáĄááœááșáž ááŹááŹáá±ážáááŻááșáᏠáá±ážá áŹáž áááŻááșááŹááŸáŻ áĄááŒá±áá±ááœá±áááŻáá«
ááœáČááŒáŹážáá±á«áșááŒááŹážáá«áááșá
âááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŸáŹ ááŒáá·áșáááșáááŻáááș áĄááŻáá ááŻááčáááŹáᏠááŻááșážáá±áŹáșááŒáźážááœá± áá±áŹááșáĄáá»áá¶áá±ááᏠááœá±á·ááááᯠááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶á áá°á áááș áááŻáááșáá»áŹááœá±áááŻáááșáž áĄááŻáá áĄááááŸááșááŒáŻááŹáá»ááŻáž áááœá±á·ááá±ážáá«áá°ážáâ
áá áčá áᏠáá±á«á·á áșááŹááŒá±áŹááœáŹážááŹáá«á ááŒááșááŹáĄá ááŻážááĄáá±ááČá· ááŻááčáááŹááŹááᯠáĄáá°ážáŠážá áŹážáá±ážááŒáźáž áĄáá±ážáĄááŒááșááŹážááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒááá±áá±ááá·áș ááááááŻááŸá áș áá¶áᏠáĄáá»áŹážáĄááŒáŹážááᯠááŸá áșááŸááșáá±áŹááșáááșááœá± áá»ááŸááșááŒáźáž áááșáá±ážáĄáá»ááșážáá±áŹááșááœá± áááŻá·ááŹááŸááááᯠáĄá áźáááșáá¶á áŹáá±ážááŹážááČá· áááá áá°áááŻááșá á áááșááá± ááźáááșááŹáááŻááș áĄááœááșáž áá¶ááŹáĄáá«áž áá á áá«áž áĄáá»ááșážáá±áŹááșááČááŸáŹ áá»ááșáá±áá±ážáááșáááŻá· áááŻáá«áááșá áá¶ááŹá·á„áá»áŸá±áŹááșááŒááșáᏠááááșážáá±áŹáșáá»áŹážáĄááœáČá· áĄááœááșážáá±ážááŸáŻáž áĄááŸááșááŻáááżáááá±áŹá· ááœááșáááșá áœáŹáááŻážááœááșááŸáŻááᯠáááșáá±ážááČá· ááŻááčáááŹáᏠááááșážáá±áŹáșááœá±ááᯠáĄáá»ááșážáá»ááŹážáᏠáááá·áșáá»áŸá±áŹáșáá°ážáááŻá· áááá·áșáá«áááșá
âááŒááșááŹá á áșáĄá ááŻážááááșážááŹážááŹááá±áŹá· ááŹááááșážááŸááááșáá±á«á· áááșáá°á·á០áĄáááșáĄááœááșáááŸáźááČá· áĄááœááș á áŹáááșážáááŒáŻáááŻááș ááŹááœá±áááșáž áĄáá»áŹážááŒáźážááŸááááșá ááá»ááŻá·áááșážááŹážáááșážááČá· áá»á¶ááœááșáá±áŹáșáá°ááœáŹážááŹááœá±áááșáž ááŸááá«áááșá ááááááŻááŸá áșá áá¶ááŹáá±áŹáșááœá±á áŠážáá±áŹááșááŒáźáž áá±ááčááŹáááŻá·áááșá áááșážáá»áŸá±áŹááșáááșá ááźááá áčá ááœá±ááČá·áááșáááșááŒáźáž áá¶ááŹáá±áŹáșááœá±áá±ááČá· ááŻááșážáá±áŹáșááŒáźážáá»á±áŹááșážááœá±ááᯠááááșááŹá áá«ááœááșáž ááŹááá±áŹááș áááŻáá·áșáá»á±áŹááșážáááŻááș áááŒááșáááŻááșáá°ážá áá±áŹá áá¶áᏠááŒááŻá·ááááșáááŻáșááșáĄá±áŹááș ááŒááŻá·ááá¶áᏠáá±áŹáááŒááșáááŻááșáĄá±áŹááș áĄáá»ááŻážáá»ááŻážááŻááčááá±ážááŹááŸááááșá
ááŹá០áĄáá áșáááŸáááČá· áááŹáá±áŹáșááœá± áŠážáááčááźááĄáá«áĄáááș áááŒáŹážáááŹáá±áŹáșáá¶ááŹááœá±ááᯠáááșážááŹážááŹáᏠááŹááŹáá±ážááᯠáĄáá»ááŻážáá»ááŻáž ááááșáááș ááŹážááźážáá±áᏠááŒá áșáá«áááșá ááŒáááșážáá»ááșážááČá· ááŹáᏠááŹáááŹááœááșážááŹážááČá· áááŻááșážááŒááșááŸáŹ ááźááᯠááŒá áșáááșáááŻáᏠááŸááșáááŻá·áááșážáá±áŹááșážáá«áááșá áá«ááœá±áááŻáááșáááșážááááșáááŻá· áááŻááșááœááșážáá«áááșáâ
ááááŻááșááŒááșáááșááŸáŹ áĄáá»áŹážááŻá¶ážáá±áááŻááșááČá· áááŻáááșáá»áŹ áĄáá«áĄáááș áá°á áááșááœá± áĄááŒááș ááá áșáááșáá±áŹá ááŻááčáááŹáᏠáá¶ááŹááœá±áááŻáá« ááááŸáááș áá»áŻááșáá»ááșáá±ááČá· ááŒááșááŹáĄá ááŻážááĄáá±ááČá· áĄáá±áááááș áĄá ááŻážáááČá· áĄáᯠáĄá áźáááșáá¶á áŹáᏠááźáááŻááá±á áźáááșážááᯠáá»áŸá±áŹááșááŸááșážáá±áááșáááŻááČá· ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáá»ááșááœá±ááᯠá áááșáá±á«áșáá±áááșáááŻá· ááŒááșáᏠáá°á áááșáĄá ááșážáĄááŻá¶áž áĄááœá±ááœá± áĄááœááșážáá±ážááŸá°áž áŠážáĄá±áŹááșáááșáááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá
âááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŸáŹá áá°á áááșááŒá áșááŒááșážáááŻá áĄá áčá ááŹááșááŹáᏠáááŻážááœááșáááșáááŻááŹááČá· ááźáá°áᏠáááŻááșážáááșážááŹážáááŻááșáá±áŹá·áá°ážá áááŻááșáá¶ááŹáž áááŻááșáá±áŹá·áá°ážáááŻááČá· ááŻá¶á á¶áá»ááŻážááŒá áșáá±áááșá áĄáá°ážáááŒáá·áș ááź áááŻáááșáá»áŹ áá°áá»ááŻážááœá±áááŻáááș áááŻááșáá¶ááŹážááŻááșáááș áááŻááșáá°áž áááŻááČá· áĄááá·áșáááșáá±áŹááș áááá±áŹá·ááČááČá· ááźáá°ááŹážááČá· ááŒá áșáááșááœáá·áșááœá±ááŸáŹáá« áĄááááŸáááșáá¶ááááșá á„ááᏠáĄááœááșáá±áŹááșáááŻá· áĄáááșáá±áŹááșááŒáŻáá»ááșáááș áá±áŹááșá០áĄáááșáá±áŹááșááŒáŻáááŻá· ááááŹá ááááșážááČá· áá»áźááČá· áááŻáááșáá»áŹááœá±áᏠáá»ááșážááŹáá±ážáĄááœááș áá±ážááŻáááșáááŻáááș áá±ážááŻáááŻá·áá ááá±ááŹá ááá±ááŹááœáŹáž áááŻá·ááá áááŹáááșáááŻá· ááá áĄááŻááșáĄáááŻááș ááŸáŹááœá±áááŻá·ááá áá°áááŻá·ááᯠáááșá áŻááŸá áșáá±á«ááșážáá»áŹážá áœáŹ á áźá á áșáááŻá· áááŒáźážáááŻááșáá±ážáá°ážááŹážá ááźááá±á· áá°áááŻááșáááș á ááááșáááŻááșááŒááșááČá· ááź ááŹááŹáá±ážáááŻááșáᏠáĄááááŸáááșááŻá¶ážáááŻááșáá¶ááŸáŹ ááŒááșáᏠáááŻáșááșáá¶áááșáááșáá«ááŸááá±ááŒááșáž áááșáááșáá»áŸááș ááźááá±á· ááźáááŻááá±á áźáááŻááșáá¶áááșáá±áŹááșáá±áá«áááș áááŻááČá· áááčááááŒáźáž áŠážááááșážá áááș áĄá ááŻážáááᯠáá±ážááœááșážááŻááșáááŻááșáááș áááŻá·áá±áŹááș áááșáááá«áááșáâ
ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŸáŹ ááŹááŹáá±ážááœááșáááșááœáá·áșááŸáááŒáźáž áá°á·áĄááœáá·áșáĄáá±ážááČá· ááźáááŻááá±á áźáá±áž áááŻážáááșááŹá á±áááŻá· áĄáá±áááááș áĄá ááŻážá áááŻááșá áŹážááŸááșááœá±áᏠááŒááșááŹáĄá ááŻážá ááŹáááșááŸááá°ááœá±á ááŹááŹáá±ážáá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááșááœá±á NGO áĄááœáČá·áĄá ááșážááœá±ááČá· áĄáá«ááá·áșáááŻááșáž ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááœá±ážááœá±ážáá±áááᯠááááááŻááŸá áș áá ááŒáźáž áĄáá±áááááșááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄáááș ááœááșáááșážáááŻá·á áș (Tom Lantos Block Burmese Junta Anti- Democratic Efforts Act) ááČá· JADE áĄááșá„ááá±ááČá· áá»ááŸááș áĄáá±ážáá° áá±áŹááșááœááșáá±áááșááŻá·ááááșáž áĄá áźáááșáá¶á áŹááŸáŹ áá±á«áșááŒááŹážáá«áááșá
http://www.voanews.com/burmese/news/–09_13_11_my-news-burmese—-129770278.html
kai
September 15, 2011 at 1:50 am
TIFF 2011: No love for Aung San Suu Kyi biopic The Lady
September 12, 2011. 11:17 pm âą Section: The Cine Files
I find this hard to imagine, but The Guardian also says that The Lady is worse than Madonnaâs movie W.E.
Oh, dear!
Meanwhile,
While Iâm expressing disappointment, Iâd also like to say that itâs really annoying to see Michelle Yeoh constantly referred to as a âBond Girl,â just because she was in the movie Tomorrow Never Dies.
Sheâs been in dozens of films, in a career stretching back to the 1980s.
http://blogs.montrealgazette.com/2011/09/12/tiff-2011-no-love-for-aung-san-suu-kyi-biopic-the-lady/
ááŒá±áŹááșááŒáźáž
September 15, 2011 at 6:40 am
ááá»áźážáá»á áșááČá·ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșááČá· áá°ááĄáááșáá»áŹáž
Khonumthung News Group » KNG News, ááœá±á·ááŻá¶áá±ážááŒááșážáááșហ» ââáááșá áᏠááŻá¶ážáááŸááá°ážââ áá»ááșážááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄáááș ááŸáá·áș áĄááșááŹáá»á°áž
ââáááșá áᏠááŻá¶ážáááŸááá°ážââ áá»ááșážááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄáááș ááŸáá·áș áĄááșááŹáá»á°áž
September 14th, 2011 | Add a Comment | 849 views
ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș áĄáááșáᶠáĄáááșááŹáž áĄá ááŻážááá áș áááșááŹááŒáźážáá±áŹááș á ááĄááŒáŹ ááŻááááĄááŒáááș ááŒááșáá±áŹááșá ᯠááœáŸááș áá±áŹáșááᯠá©ááŻááșá áá áááșáá±á·á áá±á«áșáá°áá»ááșážáááČá·ááŒáźážá ááŹááá·áș á ááșáááșáᏠáá áááșáá±á·ááœááș áááŻááșážáá±áááŒáźáž ááŸáá·áș ááŒááș áááș ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄá ááșážáĄáá±ážáá»áŹáž áááșáááș áá»ááșážáááœáŹážáááș ááŒá áșáááșá
áá»ááșážááŒááșáááșááœááș ááŒááșáááșáááșááŒáźážáá»áŻááșáŠážáá±áŹááșááá·áș ááŒááșáááșáĄá ááŻážá ááœáČá·á ááșážááŹážáá±áŹáșáááșáž ááŒááșáááșáĄá ááŻážáááœááșáž ááá« áááșááá·áș ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄáááșáá»áŹážá áĄáá±áĄááŹážááŸáá·áș áááșážáááŻá·áĄáá±ááŒáá·áș áááșááá·áșááŻááșáááșážáá»áŹáž áá±áŹááșááœááșáá±áááșááᯠááŸááșáž ááŸááșážáááșážáááșáž áááááá±ážáá±á
áááșážááá áčá áĄááœááș áááá ááœá±áž áá±áŹááșááœáČ ááœááș áá»ááșážááŒááșáááșá០áĄáááș(áá)áŠáž ááœá±ážáá±áŹááșáá¶ááŹážááá±áŹ áá»ááșážáááŻážáááș áá±ážáá«ááź (á áźááźááź) á áá»ááșážááŒááșáááș ááááșáž ááŒááŻá·áááșáĄááŸááș (á) ááČáááčááááșááŒá±á០ááŒááșáááșááœáŸááșáá±áŹáș áááŻááșá áŹážááŸááșáĄááŒá áș ááœá±ážáá±áŹááș áááșááŒá±áŹááșáá¶ááá±áŹ áŠážááŹá·áááșáž ááᯠáááŻáá°ááșážááŻááșá áááșááœááșáá±ážááŒááșážááŹážáá«áááșá
áá±áž á á áááŒáŹáááșáá»ááșážáááá·áș ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄá ááșážáĄáá±ážááŸáŹ áŠážááŹá·áááșážáĄáá±ááČá· ááŹááœá±áááșááŒáááŻá· á áźá ááșááŹážááČ?
ááŒá± á á ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșááŸáŹá áááŒáááșááŸáŹ áááčá á áá»ááșáááș áááŻááááșááŒááá°ážáááŻááŒáźážáá±áŹá· áááșážá„ááá±ááČááŸáŹ ááŒááŹááșážááŹáž áááșá áá«ááŒá±áŹáá·áș áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá· ááŒááŻááșááá±áŹááșáááșáž áááșááŒáááŻá·áááá°ážá áĄáČááźáá±áŹá· ááááșážááŒááŻá·áááșáĄáá±ááČá·á á á¶áá»áááșááŸáź áá±áŹáșááŻá¶ážááœááșáž áááŸááá°ážá ááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááááŻááșááŒááŻá·áááŒááŻá·ááŒá áșááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááá±á·áá áá±á«ááșááœááșážáááșáž áááŸááá±ážáá°ážáá±á«á·áá±á áĄáČáááŻááŹáá»áá°ážá ááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááááș â ááááșáž-áá±áá°á-ááá±áž ááŹážáááșážá (Maintenance) ááŒáŻááŒááșááŸáŻáááŸááá°áž áá«áá»ááŻážááœá± áááșááŒáááŻá·ááŸááá«áááșá
áá±áž á á ááááĄááŒáááș áá±á«áșáá°áá»ááșážáááČá· ááŒááșáááșááœáŸááșáá±áŹáș ááČá· áĄáᯠááŒááșáá±á«áșááá·áș ááŻááááĄááŒáááș ááŒááșáááșááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșááá±á«áșáááș á ááșááŒáŹážááŹáááŸáŹ ááŒááșáááșááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄáááșááœá± áĄáá±ááČá· ááŹááŻááșáááșážááœá± áá±áŹááșááœááșááŒá áșáá«áááČ?
ááŒá± á á ááŹááŸááŻááșá ááŹáááŸááá«áá°ážá áááșááŒáźážáĄááœáČá·ááœá±ááá±áŹá· áá°áááŻá·ááŻááșá ááŹááœá±áá±áŹá·ááŸáááŸáŹáá«á áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·ááá±áŹá· ááŹááŸááᯠááŻááșááᯠáááŻááșááá±ážáᏠááŹááŻááșáááșážááŸááᯠáá ááá±ážáá°ážá
áá±áž á á ááááĄáá±á«ááș ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáș áĄá ááșážáĄáá±ážááá± áŠážááŹá·áááșážááᯠáá»ááșážááŒááșáááșááČá· á„ááá±ááŒáŻáá±ážáá±áŹáșááźááź á„ááčáá áĄááŒá áș ááá·áșáĄááșááŹážáááșáá±áŹáșá áĄáČááź áá±áŹáșááźááź áĄáá±ááČá· ááŹááœá± áá±áŹááșááœááșááŒá áșáá«áááČ?
ááŒá± á á ááŹááŸáááŸááá±ážáá°ážá áĄáááŹážáá±áááŹáá«ááČá á„ááᏠááŹááČá·áá°áááșážáááŻáá±áŹá· áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·ááᯠáĄááșááŹáá»á°ážááŒá±áááș ááááșážááŒááŻá·ááá± ááŸá áșáá±áŹááșáĄá±áŹááșáááșá áá»áá±áŹáș ááŸáá·áș áá»áá±áŹá·áș áá°áááșáá»ááșáž áŠážáááŻážááœááșáá±á«á·áá±á á áŹážááœáČ ááŻááŹážáááŻááșáá±áŹá·áá±áž áááș áá áŹáááșážáá±ážáááșáá±á«á·áá±á ááČáᶠá áŹááœááșááœá±áá±áŹá·ááá±ážáá°ážá ááŹááŻááșáá«áááŻááŒáźáž áááŻááșážááŹáááșážáááŸááá°ážá ááŻááșáááŻááș ááœáá·áș áááșáž ááŹááŸááá±ážáá±ážáá°ážá
áá±áž á á áŠážááŹá·áááșážáááŻá·áĄáá±ááČá· ááŻá¶ážááááșááá°ážááŹáž?
ááŒá± á á ááŻá¶ážáááșáááŻá·ááᯠááŻá¶ážááááŸááá°ážá ááá«ááá± ááŻááᯠááŹážáá«áááŻááœáŹážááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄá ááșážáĄáá±áž ááœáŹážáááșááŹá០áĄá ááŹááŸááŻá¶ážáááșážáááŸááá°áž ááźáááŻááČ áĄáááŹážáá±áááŹá
áá±áž á á áĄá ááŻážááááșááá± ááŻá¶ážááœá±ááŹááœá± á áźá ááșáá±ážáᏠáááŸááá°ážááŹáž?
ááŒá± á á ááŹááŸáááŸááá°ážá ááŒá áșááŻá¶á áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·á ááœá±áĄáŻááș(ááŒááŻá·áááșáĄáŻááșáá»á°ááșáá±ážááŸá°áž) ááČá· áááșáĄá±áŹááșááŸáŹ áá±áááááŻááᯠááŹáááŻááᯠáááșáá°áá០áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·ááᯠáááŻá ááŻááșááŹáááŻááșáá°ážá
áá±áž á á ááŒááșáá°áá°ááŻááœá±ááá±áŹ áŠážááŹá·áááșážáááŻá·ááᯠááŒááșáááșáĄáááșááœá±ááᯠáááșáááŻááŒááșááČ áááșááᯠáááșáá¶ááŒááČ?
ááŒá± á á áá°ááŻááœá±á áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·ááᯠááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄáááș áááŻááŸááșážáá±áŹááș áááááŒáá°ážá áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá· áááŻááșá áŹážááŸááșáááŻááŸááșáž áá±áŹááșá០áááŻáááŻáá ááŻááșáá°ážá á„ááᏠááŹááááŻááșááŹáááŻáááșáĄá±áŹááș áááșáááșážááá±áŹááșááᯠáá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·á áááșážáááșážáá«ážáá«áž áá°áááŻá·ááŹááááŻááșáᏠáá áșáááșážááŸáŻááŸááááș áĄáČáá«ááŒá±áŹáááŻááșáááșá áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·ááᯠááŹááŸáááŻá ááŻááșáᏠáááŻááșáá°ážá áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·ááᯠáá°áááŻá· áĄááœááșáá±áŹááșáá»áŹáž ááŸááșááŹážááááá°ážá áĄáČáááŻááČ áááșáá¶áááș áĄááșááááșá០áááșážáááșážá ááŹáá±áŹááșážáááșá
áá±áž á á áĄáČáá«ááœá±á ááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áșááČáá»?
ááŒá± á á á áá áșáááŻá áá±áá»áŹáĄááŒá±áŹááșážáĄááČ áááŸááá±ážáááŻá·ááČ áááșáááșá ááŒáźážáá±áŹá· áá°ááŻááœá±áááŻá áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá·áááŻááșáá¶ááŸáŹ áá«ááźá áŻá¶ ááźáááŻááá±á áźá áá áș áá»áá·áșááŻá¶ážáá±áááșáááŻáᏠáááșáá°ááŸááá±áŹááá±á«ááșááŒáá°ážá
áá±áž á á áá»ááșážááŒááșáááșáĄá ááŻážá áá«ááŸáááŻááș áááșááŒáźážážáá»áŻááșááá±áŹ áŠážááŹá·áááșážáááŻá·ááᯠááŒááșáááșááœáŸááșáá±áŹáș áĄáááșááœá±ááᯠáĄááŻááșááá áčá áááŻááșáááșáᏠááœá±ážááœá±ážááŹáááŻá· áááŸááá°ážááŹáž?
ááŒá± á á áááșááŒáźážáá»á°ááșá áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá· áĄáááșááœá±ááᯠáááŻááșáááșáᏠáááŸááá«áá°ážá
áá±áž á á áááșááŒáźážáá»áŻááș áŠážááŻááșážáááŻááșážáááŻáá±áŹ áááșáááŻááŒááșááČá áá»ááșážááŒááșáááșáĄááœááș ááááș áĄááŻááșááŻááșááá·áșáá° áááŻá· ááŒááșááŹáž?
ááŒá± á á (ááŒá±áŹáááŻá·) áááșážáááșáž á á±áŹáá±ážáááșáááŻá· áááșáááșá ááŹááŒá áșáááŻá·ááČ áááŻáá±áŹá· ááŻá áá±áž áá«áž ááŒá±áŹááșá áá±áŹááșááČ ááŸááá±ážáááșáááŻáá±áŹá· áá°á·áĄáá±ááČá·áááșáž ááŹááŻááșáááŻá· ááŹáááŻááșáááŸááșáž áá±áŹááșážáá±áŹááșáž áááŠážáááșááááșáá°ážá
áá±áž á á áá»ááșááČá· áá»ááșážááŒááșáááș áááșááŒáźážáĄááœáČá·ááœá±ááá±áŹ ááŹááœá±ááŻááșáá±ááŒááŹááČ?
ááŒá± á á áá±á·áááŻááșážáá±áŹá·áááźážááœááșáá±ááŒááŹááČá ááŻááșááŒáá«áááșá áá±á·áá±áŹááá« ááŹááŻááșááŸááșážáá±áŹá· áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá· áááááá°ážá
etone
September 19, 2011 at 10:28 am
áááŻááŸá áșááŻááșááœááș áĄáááČá·ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá áșáá»áŹáž áááșáá¶áá±á«áșááœááșááŹáááș
ááááŹááœááșáž
áĄááœáČ áá á áĄááŸááș á áá ( áá-áá á á á áááá)
http://www.myanmar.mmtimes.com/2011/news/535/news12.html
ááŒáááźááŻááșááŒááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáááș áá áșáá»á áș áááșá áá áșááŒáá·áș áĄáááČá·ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșáž ááŻáá áș áááŻááșážááᯠáááŻááŸá áșááŻááșááŸá áááșáá« ááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșáááŻááșáááș á áźá ááșáá± ááŒá±áŹááșážááŸáá·áș áá áșáá»áááșáááșážááŸáŹáááș ááœáŸá±áá¶ááœááșááźááźááŹá áá áșáááŻááșáá¶ááŻá¶ážáĄáááŻááșážáĄááŹááŒáá·áș áááșážáá°ááŒáá·áșááŸáŻáááŻááșááá·áș áĄáááČá·ááŻááșáᶠáááŻááșážáá áș mn tv (Myanmar National TV) ááᯠááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșáááŻááșáááș á áźá ááșáá±ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá
áá±ááŒááșáá±áŹáșá áá±áŹááșáááŻááŒááŻá·ááŸá ááŒáááź ááŻááșáá¶ááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșááŻá¶á០á áźá ááșáá±áŹááșááœááșááá·áș áĄáááŻáá«áááŻááșážáá»áŹážááᯠáĄááŒááșážáá»ááșážáĄáŹážááŒáá·áș ááŒáááź(á) áᯠáĄáááșáá±ážáᏠááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșááœáŹážáááșáᯠáĄáááŻáá«áááŻááșážáá»áŹážáĄááœááș ááŒááșáááșáá±ááá·áș ááŻááčáááźáá»áŹážááČ á០ááźááźááŹááŻááčáááźáá áșááŻá ááŹáááșááŸááá° áá áșáŠážá ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáž(ááș)ááᯠááŒá±áŹ ááŒáŹážáááșá
áááŻáááșááŹáááČááœááș á ááșážáááșááŻááș ááœáŸáá·áșáááș á áźá ááșáá±ááá·áș áĄáááŻáá«ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá»áŹážááᯠáááșááá·áșááŻááșáá¶ááœáŸáá·áșá ááșááŻá¶ áá»áŹážááŸáá áșááá·áș áááŻáááșááŸá ááŒáááźááŻááșááŒááș áá¶ááŒáŹážá០ááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșáá±ááá·áșáĄáááŻááșáž ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáᶠá§ááááŹá áá ááŹáááŻááșááŸáŻááșážá០áááșážáá°ááŒáá·áșááŸáŻáááŻááșáááá·áșáááș ááŻáááșáž áááșážá áááŻáááșá
áááŻáĄá áźáĄá ááșááŸáá·áș áááșáááșááŒáźáž ááŒáááźááŻááșáá¶áááŻá· áááșááœááșáá±ážááŒááșážááŹááœááș ááááșážááŻááșááŒááșáááŻááșááŒááșážáááŸááá±ážááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒá±áŹáááŻáááșá
ááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșáááșá áźá ááșááŹážááá·áșáááŻááșážáá»áŹážááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŹááźááźáááŻááŹááșááŹážááŸáá·áș áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹážááŹááșááŹážáá»áŹáž ááŒáááá·áșáááŻááșážá áĄáŹážáá áŹážá ááźáááŸáá·áș ááŹááœááșážáá»áŹáž ááœáČá ááșááŹážááá·áșáááŻááșážá documentary ááŸáá·áș ááŒááșááœááșážáĄá áźáĄá ááșáá»áŹážáááŻááșážá áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹáž ááŹááșáááșážááœáČ ááźážááá·áșáááŻááșážá áááșááŸáááŒá áá±ááá·áș ááŒáááźáááŻááșážááČá·áááŻá· áĄá áźáĄá ááș áĄá áŻá¶áĄáááșáá«áááșááá·áșáááŻááșážáá»áŹážááŒá áșááŒáźáž áá»ááșááá·áșáááŻááșážááŸá áșááŻáĄááœááș á áźá ááșáá±ááČ áᯠáááșážá ááŒá±áŹáááșá
“ááźáááŻááșážááœá±ááᯠáááșážááŒáá·áșáááŻá·áĄááœááș receiver áááŻáá«áááșá áá»áœááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá·ááá±áŹá· Set Top Box áááŻá· áá±á«áșáááșá áá±áŹááș UHF áĄááșááźáᏠáááŻáááșá áá«á áááșáž MRTV-4 á ááááșáááșááŻááșážá áĄáČáá«ááČá·áááșážááááșá áĄááŻáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáž áĄááșááźááŹááœá±ááááșáž 3-in-1 ááŹáᏠáááŻáá±áŹá· ááŒáżááŹáááŸááá±áŹááșáá°ážá áá«áá±ááá·áș Set Top Box áá±áŹá· áááșáááŸáŹáá±á«á·” áᯠáááșážá ááŒá±áŹáááșá
áĄáááŻáá« Set Top Box áá»áŹážááᯠááŒááșááŹá· á áźážááœáŹážáá±ážáá±áŹáșáááŻáá±ážááŸááșá០áá±áŹááșážáá»ááœáŹážáááșááŒá áșááŒáźáž áá áșááŻá¶ážáá»áŸááș áá»ááș áá,ááá ááá·áșááŒáá·áș áá±áŹááșážáá»áááș áá»áŹááŹážáááșáᯠááááááșá
áĄáááČá·ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá»áŹáž áááŻážááœáŹážááŹááá·áșáĄááœááș ááŻááșáá¶ááŻááșáááșážááœááș ááááááșááŒááŻááșááŸá áșáááșááŸáŻááááș áááșááŸá ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áĄááŒáááșáĄáááș ááŸááș ááŒááŻááșáááœááșááŸááááșáᯠáááșážá áááŻáááșá ááœáŸá±áá¶ááœááșááŸááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșááá·áș mn tv áĄá áźáĄá ááșááŸáá·áșáááșáááșá ááŻááčáááźá Free-to-air ááŹáá០áĄááœá±ááœá±áááșáá±áá»áŹ áŠážáá±áŹáșáááșáá±áŹááșá “á ááœáŸáá·áșááœáŸáá·áșáá»ááșážááŸáŹ áá áșáááŻááșáá¶ááŻá¶áž áĄáááŻááșážáĄááŹááČá· ááœáŸáá·áșááŹáá»ááŻážáááșáž ááŒá áșáá»ááșááŒá áșáááŻááșáá«áááșá ááááșáááŻá· áááœáŸáá·áșááŒá áșáá±ážáááș ááŒááŻá·ááŒáźážááœá±ááᯠáĄáááșááœáŸáá·áșáá«áááșá áá ááŹááź ááŻá¶áž ááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșáááŻá· á áźá ááșááŹážáá±ááá·áș á á áá»ááșážááŸáŹáá±áŹá· áĄáá»áááșáááŻááșážáĄáá±ááČá·ááČ ááŒáááŸáŹáá«”áᯠááŒá±áŹáááșá
ááááșážáĄáá»ááșáĄáááșááŸáá·áș áá»á±áŹáșááŒá±áá±ážááᯠáĄáááááŹážááá·áș Infotainment áĄá áźáĄá ááșáá»áŹážááᯠááŻááșááœáŸáá·áșáááș áááșááœááșááŹážááŒáźáž áĄá áźáĄá ááșáá»áŹážááᯠááŒáá·áșááŒáá·áșá áŻá¶á áŻá¶ áááșáááșáááŻááșáááș á áźá ááșááŹážáááșááŻáááșáž ááááááșá
áĄáááŻáá«ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá áșáá»áŹáž ááœááș áá±á«áșááŹáá«á ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș ááŒááșááŹá·áĄáá¶ááŸáá·áș ááŻááșááŒááșáá¶ááŒáŹážá ááŒáááźááŻááșááŒááșáá¶ááŒáŹážá ááŒááșááŒáŹážáá±áž áááșááŒáźážááŹáááŸáá·áș ááŻááčááááááŻááčáááźáá»áŹáž áá°ážáá±á«ááșážááŻááșáááŻááșáá±ááá·áș MRTV-4 ááŸáá·áș Myanmar International á ááá·áș ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá»áŹáž áĄáá«áĄáááș áĄáááČá·ááŒáá·áșááŸáŻáááŻááșááá·áș ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșáž áá ááŻáá»á±áŹáș ááŸáááŹáááșááŒá áșáááșá
ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá»áŹážáĄááœááș ááŒá±áŹáșááŒáŹ áááșáá±áŹááșááŸáŻááŻááșáááșážáá»áŹáž áá±áŹááșááœááșáá±ážáá±ááá·áș Multimedia Group Ltd á០áĄáŻááșáá»áŻááșááŸáŻáá«áááŻááșáᏠáŠážáá»á±áŹáșáááșáž á áĄáááČá·ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá áșáá»áŹáž ááœááșáá±á«áșááŹáá«á ááŻááșáá¶áááŻááșážáá»áŹážááœááș ááŒá±áŹáșááŒáŹ áááŸááááșáĄááœááș ááŸááșááŒááŻááșááŸáŻáá»áŹáž áááŻáááŻáá»áŹáž ááŹáááŻááșááŒáźáž áĄááááĄáŹážááŒáá·áș áááŻááșáá¶áááŻááș ááŒááșááŹá·áĄáá¶ááŸáá·áș ááŻááșááŒááșáá¶ááŒáŹážáááŻááșážááœááș ááŒá±áŹáșááŒáŹáááŸáááŸáŻááŸáŻááșážááŹáž áá»áááșážááŹáááŻááșááœááșááŸááááșáᯠááŻá¶ážáááșáááșá
etone
September 19, 2011 at 10:37 am
áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș áĄáááčáááááșážááŒáŹážáááș áá±áŹááșážá áŹážáá¶áááŒáźáž ááŒááșáááș ááœááșááŒá±ážááŹááá·áș áááŻááșáááșáá±áŹááș áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáá¶á០áááŸáááá·áș ááŻááșážáá¶áá«ááșáá»áŹážá០áá áșááá·áș áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș áá»ááșáá áșááČá·ááá·áș áááŻážááŸá áșáĄááœááș áááźážáááșáĄáŹáž ááŒááșáááșáááșáááșáááŻááșááČá·
http://www.news-eleven.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10183:2011-09-18-08-08-48&catid=42:2009-11-10-07-36-59&Itemid=112
áááá ááŻááŸá áșáĄááœááșážá áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș áĄáááčáááááșážááŒáŹážáááș áá±áŹááșážá áŹážáá¶áááŒáźáž ááŒááșáááșááœááșááŒá±ážááŹááá·áș áááŻááșáááșáá±áŹááș áĄáá»ááŻážáááźážáᶠááŸáááŸáááá·áș ááŻááșážáá¶áá«ááșáá»áŹážá០áá áșááá·áș áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș áá»ááșáá áșááČá·ááá·áș áááșážá áááŻážááŸá áșáĄááœááșáááźážáĄáŹáž áááá ááŻááŸá áș á ááșáááșááŹá á áááșáá±á·ááœááș ááŒááșáááș áááșáááșáááŻááșááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááșážáááŸááá«áááșá
ááŒá áșá ááșááŸáŹ áááá ááŻááŸá áșáĄááœááșáž á áááŻááșáááŻááșáᶠáá°áááșááŒááșáááș ááááșážááááșááŒááŻá· (áá»ááșážááœáŸá±áá±áŹáșááŸáá·áș áááșá ááș ááá·áșááŒááŻá·) áĄááźáž ááá±áŹááșááœáŹááœááșáá± áááŻááșááá·áș áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááŹáž áŠážááŹáá»ááșáááș ááŸááșážááŒááșáááș ááŒá±áŹááșáááŻááșáž áááčááá°ááŒááŻá·áááș áááșááŻá¶áĄáŻááșá ᯠáááșááŹááœáŹáááŻá· ááŹáá±áŹááșáááșáááșá ááș áááșááŹááœáŹá០áĄáá»ááŻážáááźáž áá áŠážáĄáŹáž áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș ááŒá¶ááŻááșáá«á áá áșáááșáá»áŸááș á ááááșááŒáááșáž áá»ááș á ááá áááŸá áááșááŻáááŻáᏠáá±á«áșáá±áŹááșááœáŹážááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá
áááșááŹááœáŹáá± á— ááŸáá·áș áááșážááááźážáááșááŸá áșáŠážáááŻá·áááșáááșáž áááșážáááŻá·ááŸáá·áșáĄáá° áááčááá°á០ááŹážááŸááŻáž- áá»ááșážááœáŸá±áá±áŹáșáá áá±áŹáșáá±áŹáșááŹááșááŒáá·áș ááœááșááœáŹááČá·ááŒáźáž áááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶ááŸá ááá±áŹááș ááœáŹáááŻá· áááŹážááááșáááșážááŒá±áŹááșážá០áááș áá±áŹááșááČá·ááŒáᏠáŠážááŹáá»ááș áĄáááșááœááș áá«ážáááșááá·áșáá±ááČá·ááᏠááŒá¶ááŻááșááŻááșáááŻááșáááŒááșážáááŸáááČ ááŒá±áŹááșáááșááŒá±áŹááș áá±á·ááœááșáĄááŻááșááŸááșáááŻáá°áá áșáŠážáá±áŹááș ááŹá áááșážááŸáá·áș áááźážáááșááŸá áșáŠážáĄáŹáž áá»ááșážá áŻááŒááșáááșá ááááșážáá±áŹáșááŒááŻá·áá áá±á«áșáá±áŹááșááœáŹážááŒáźáž ááááșážáá±áŹáșááŒááŻá·áááșá áá»ááșáá±áá»áááșááœáŹáá± áááŻááșáá°áá»ááŻáž áááșáá±á«ááșážáá°áž áááŻáá°áᶠáááŻááșááœááșááœá± ááááá ááŒáá·áș áá±áŹááșážáá»ááČá·ááŒááșážááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá
áááŻá·áá±áŹááș á— áááș áááșáá±á«ááșážáá°ážááŸáá·áș áá±á«ááșážáááșážáá±áááŻááșááČá·á ááŒááșážááŒá±áŹáá·áș áááŻááșáááșáááŸáááŹáᏠáááááááŻá·ááá±á·áĄá ááááá»áŹážáᶠáááŻááșáááș áááŸáááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒááșáááșááŒáááááș ááŒá áșáááșáᯠáááșáá±á«ááșážáá°ážáĄáŹáž ááŻá¶ááŒááșáĄá±áŹááșááŒá±áŹáááŻá ááŒá±áŹááșááŸá áșáĄááœááș áááźážáááșááŸáá·áșáĄáá° ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áááŻá· ááŒááșáááș ááœááșááŒá±ážááŹááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž áá ááááșá
ááŹážááŸááŻáž áá°ááŻááșáá°ážááŸáŻáááŻááșáá»ááș áá±ážáĄáá°ážáĄááœáČá·á០ááááșážáááŸááááŒáá·áș áá°ááĄáŹáž ááŹáá±áŹááșááœá±á·ááŻá¶áá±ážááŒááșáž ááČá·áᏠáĄáááčáááááșážááŒáŹážáá±á«ááșážáááșážááČá·ááá·áș áááșáá±á«ááșážáá°ážá áááșáááŻááșááŻááșáž áá¶áá«ááșááŸáá·áș áááŻááșážááŻááșážáá¶áá«ááșáĄááŒááș áá±áááș ááááșá ᏠáĄáááĄáá»ááᯠááááŸáááááŒáá·áș áá»ááșážááœáŸá±áá±áŹáș áá°ááŻááșáá°ážááŸáŻáááŻááșáá»ááșáá±áž áĄáá°ážáĄááœáČá·áááŻá· áĄáá°áĄááź áá±áŹááșážááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá
áááŻá·áá±áŹááș áááŻááșáááŻááșáᶠáá°áááș ááŒááșáááș ááááșážáááČá áááșážááŸáá·áș ááááșážááááș ááŒááŻá·ááČááŹáá០ááŹáááșááŸááá°áá»áŹážá០áĄáááŻáá« áááŻážááŸá áșáĄááœááș áááźážáááșáĄáŹáž áááșáááșá áá»ááșážááœáŸá±áá±áŹáș áá°ááŻááșáá°ážááŸáŻ áááŻááșáá»ááșáá±áž áĄáá°ážáĄááœáČá·ááŹáááșáá¶áᶠááœáŸáČááŒá±áŹááșážáá±ážááČá·ááŒáźáž áááŻááŸáá áșááá·áș áááá ááŻááŸá áș á ááșáááșááŹá á áááș áá±á·ááœááș áááááșááŒá áșáá°áᶠááŒááșáááșááœáŸáČááŒá±áŹááșážáá±ážááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá
etone
September 19, 2011 at 10:45 am
ááźááźááŹááœááșáááșááœáá·áș á„ááá±ááŒááșážáááșááŒáááș á áźá ááșáá±
http://www.myanmar.mmtimes.com/2011/news/535/news04.html
á ááŻážáááșážáááșáž
áĄááœáČ áá á áĄááŸááș á áá ( áá-áá á á á áááá)
ááááĄááŒáááș ááŒááșáá±áŹááșá áŻááœáŸááșáá±áŹáș áĄá ááșážáĄáá±ážá áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáááčááááŒáźáž á “áááŻááșáá¶ááŹážáááŻá·á áá°ááĄááœáá·áșáĄáá±áž ááŸáá·áșáááșáááșááŒáźáž á„ááá±ááŸáá·áșáĄááź áá»áá·áșááŻá¶áž áááŻááșá á±áááș áááŻáĄááșááá·áș á„ááá±áá»áŹážááᯠááŒááșáááșááŒááșážá áĄáá áș ááŒááčááŹááșážáá±ážááŒááșážáá»áŹáž áá±áŹááșááœááșááœáŹážáááș”áᯠáááá·áșááŒáŹážááČá· ááá·áșáĄáááŻááșáž ááŒááșááŒáŹážáá±ážáááșááŒáźážááŹá áĄáá±ááŒáá·áș ááźááźááŹáááŻááșááŹá„ááá±áá»áŹážááᯠááŒááșáááșááŒááșážá áá»ááșááááșážááŒááșážá áááșáá»ááș ááŒááșážá áĄáá áșááŒááčááŹááșážááŒááșáž á áááșáá»áŹáž ááŒáŻááŻááșáááŻááșáááș ááŒááșáá±áŹááșá áŻááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· áááșááŒáááŻááșáááŻá·á áźá ááșáá±áŹááșááœááșáá±ááŒá±áŹááșážááŸáá·áș ááá·áșáá»á±áŹáșááá·áșáĄáá»áááșááœááș ‘á áŹáá±á áá á áșáá±áž’áá°á ááŸááá±áŹá·áááș áááŻááșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒááșááŒáŹážáá±ážáááșááŒáźáž ááŹáááŸáá·áș áááșáá»á±ážááŸáŻáááșááŒáźážááŹá ááŒááșáá±áŹááșá áŻáááșááŒáźáž áŠážáá»á±áŹáșáááșážá ááŒá±áŹáááșá
“ááźáááŻááŒááșáááșááČá·áĄáá« ááźááźááŹááœááș áááșááœáá·áșááČá· ááźááźááŹáááŹážáá»áŹáž ááááŻááșááœáá·áșááœá±áááșáž áá«áĄá±áŹááșá ááœááșáááșááœáá·áșááᯠáĄááœáČááŻá¶ážá áŹážááŒááșáž áááŸááĄá±áŹááșá ááŹáááșááČá· áááčáááŹážááœá±áááșážáá«áĄá±áŹááșá á„ááá± áá áșááŻáᯠáá»á°ážááœááșááČá·áááș áá»áá¶áááŻááșááČá· ááŒá áșáááșááœá±áááșážáá«áĄá±áŹááș á áźá ááș áá±áŹááșááœááșáá±áá«ááŒáźá ááááŻááșááœáá·áșáááŻáᏠááźááźááŹááᯠáĄááŹáĄááœááșáá±ážááŒááșážáá«ááČá ááźááźááŹá„ááá±ááᯠááźáááŻááŒááșáááșáá±ážááœáČ ááŹááŸáŹ áĄáá»ááŻá·áá±áŹ á„ááá±áá»áŹážááᯠááŒááșáááș ááŒáá·áșá áœááșáá»ááșáá»áŹážááČá·áĄáá° áááá ááŻááŸá áșá áá°áááŻááșááá±áŹááșááááșážá ááŸá±á·áá± áá»áŻááșááŻá¶ážááᯠáááșááŒááŹážáá«áááșá ááŸá±á·áá± áá»áŻááșááŻá¶ážááČá· áĄááŒá¶ááŒáŻáá»ááșáá»áŹážáááŻáááșáž ááá°ááŹážáá«áááș”áᯠáááșážá ááá áĄááŒáááș ááŒááșáá°á·ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáș ááŻáááááŻá¶ááŸááș áĄá ááșáž áĄáá±áž áá áááșááŒá±áŹááșáá±á·á ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááČá·áááșá
á ááșáááșááŹá á áááșá ááŒáŻááŻááș áá±áŹ áááșážáĄá ááșážáĄáá±ážááœááș “ááááșáž ááźááźááŹáá»áŹážá áááșááŒááșáá°ááá»ááșáá»áŹážááᯠááœááșáááșá áœáŹ ááŻááșáá±áŹáșááŒá±áŹáááŻááœáá·áșá áá±ážááŹážááŒáá·áșáá±ááœáá·áș á ááá·áș áĄááœáá·áșáĄáá±áž áá»áŹážáĄáŹáž ááŹááœááșá á±áŹáá·áșááŸá±áŹááșáá±áž ááá·áș á„ááá±áá áșáááș ááŒááčááŹááșáž áá±ážáá«áááș’ áá°ááá·áș áááșáčáááșážáá»áœááșážááČáááčááááșá០ááŒááșáá°á·ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáááŻááșá áŹážááŸááș áŠážááááșážááœáá·áșááĄáááŻááᯠááŒááșáá°á·ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáș áááŻááșá áŹáž ááŸááșáá±ážáŠážáááŻá·á ááœá±áž ááœá±ážáĄááŒáźážá áááșáááŻááșáᏠááŒááșáá±áŹááșá ᯠáááșááŒáźáž áŠážáá»á±áŹáșáááșážá ááŒááșáááș ááŸááșážáááșáž ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŹááœááș ááŒááșáá°á·ááœáŸááș áá±áŹáșáááŻá· ááŒá±ááŒáŹážááČá·ááŒááșážááŒá áșáááșá
“ááźáá±á·áĄáá«ááŸáŹ ááźááźááŹáá±áŹá áĄáŹážááŻá¶ážáĄááœááș ááœááșáááșááŸáŻá ááŹáááșááááŸáŻá ááŹáááș ááŸáááŸáŻááČá· ááŹáááșáá°ááŸáŻááœá±ááᯠáá°ážááœáČááŒáźáž áĄááŒáŻááá±áŹááČá· áá±áááșáá±áŹááș áጠáá±ážááŹážááœáá·áșááœá± áá±ážáá»ááșááŸááá«áááșá áááŻá·áá±áŹáșáááșáž áĄáá±á·áĄáá»áá·áșáááŸááá±áž ááČá·áĄááœááș ááœááșáááșááŸáŻááČá· ááŹáááșáá°ááŸáŻ áᏠáááá±áŹááááá±áŹááœá± ááŸááá±ááČáá«ááČá ááźááźááŹá„ááá±áá áș áĄáááșááŒáŻááŒááčááŹááșáž áááŻááșááŒááșážáááŒáŻááźááŸáŹáááșáž ááźááźááŹáááŹážááœá±ááČá· ááœááșáááș ááœáá·áșááœá±áĄááœááș ááŒá±áá»á±áŹá·ááŸáŻááœá± ááŒáŻááŻááșáá±ážáá±áá«áááș” áᯠáááșážá ááŸááșážáááșážááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááČá·áááșá
á€áááŻá· ááŒááŻáááșááŒá±áá»áŸá±áŹá·ááŒááșážááŸáŹ ááŒááșáá±áŹááșá áŻááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșá ááźááźááŹáááŻááș áᏠá„ááá±áá»áŹážááᯠáĄáááșááŒáŻáááŻááșáá»áááș á ááźááźááŹáááŹážáááŻá·á áá±áŹááșááœááșááŸáŻááŸáá·áș áĄáááșááá·áș áĄá¶áááșááœááșáá»ááŒá áșá á±áááș áááșááœááșáá±áŹááŒá±áŹáá·áșááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒááș áá±áŹááșá áŻáááșááŒáźážá ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááșá
ááźáá±á«ááČáááčááááșá០ááŒááșáá°á·ááœáŸááș áá±áŹáș áááŻááșá áŹážááŸááș áŠážááČááœááșážá áŠážááááșážááœáá·áșááĄáááŻááᯠáá±áŹááșáá¶ááœá±áž ááœá±ážááŹá “á„ááá±áá»áŹážá áááŹážááŻá¶ážáá»áŹáž ááŸááá± áá«áá»ááșááŸáá·áș ááźááźááŹáĄááœááș á áŹáá±á áá á áș áá±áž áááŻáĄááșáá«áá±ážáááŹáž” áá°áá±áŹ á ááŹážáááșááŸáá·áșáááșáááșááŒáźáž áááșážá “á áŹáá± á áá á áșáá±ážáááŻááŹááŸááááŻá· áááŻáá«áá±ážáááșá áá±ážááŹážáá±áŹáșááŒááŸáŻ ááŸáŹážááœááșážáááŻá· áááŹážááŻá¶áž ááŸáŹ á„ááá±áĄá áááșáááŻááșááááș áĄáá»áááșááŒáŹáááșá áĄááŻááșááœá±áá»ááșáááșá áá«á·ááŒááș áááŹáž á„ááá±á áá»ááŸááșáááŻááșááČá· ááŒá áșáááșá ááŒááșážáá«áááșá áá±áŹááșáááșááœá±á ááœá±áááșááœá± áá«ááŹáááșá á áŹáá±á áá á áșá áááșááŒáźáž ááááșážáá±ážááČá·áĄáá« áá áșáá«ááá± ááá áá±ážááŻá¶ááČá· ááŒáźážáá«áááșá áá áșáá«ááá± ááŸá áșáááș ááŸáááŸááŻááșážáá±ážááŻá¶ááČá· ááŒáźážáá«áááșá “ááŻááááĄáá»ááșá ááá±á· ááźáááŻááá±á áź ááᯠááœáŹážááŒááŹááŸáŹ ááœá±ážá ááá±ážáá±áž áĄááá·áșááČ ááŸááá«áá±ážáááșá ááá±ážáááșáž áá°ááČá áá°á·ááŹáá° á áŹážáááá·áșáááșá áá°á·ááŹáá° áá±áá»ááŻážáááá·áșáááșá áá°á·ááŹáá° ááœáŹážáááá·áșáááș áááŻááŒáźáž ááœáŸááșááŹážáááŻá· áááá«áá°ážá ááźááá±áŹ áĄá á áŹáá±á áá á áșáá±ážáᏠááŸááááŻá·áááŻáá«áááșá áááŻá·áá±áŹáș ááźáááŻááá±á áźááá±áŹáĄá ááá·áș áá»á±áŹáșááČá·áĄáá»áááșááŸáŹááŸááá±áŹá·ááŸáŹáááŻááșáá°áž áááŻá· ááŒá±áŹáááŻáá«áááș” áá°á ááŒáá·áșá áœááș ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááœáŹážááČá·áááșá
áááŻá·ááŒááș ááźááźááŹáááŻááșáᏠá„ááá±áá»áŹážááᯠáááșáááŻááșááŹááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșá áĄáááșááŒáŻ ááŒááčááŹááșážááŒáźážááá·áșáĄáá« ááźááźááŹáááŹážáááŻá·áĄáá±ááŒáá·áș ááœááșáááșááŸáŻááŸáá·áș ááŹáááșááááŸáŻá ááœááșáááșááŸáŻááŸáá·áș ááŹáááșáá°ááŸáŻá ááœááșáááș ááŸáŻááŸáá·áș áááșááŒááșááŻá¶áááŹážáááŻá·ááᯠáááșáááŻááșááŹážáᏠááœáČá·á ááșážááŻá¶ áĄááŒá±áá¶á„ááá±áĄá á ááșážáááșážááŸááá±áŹ ááœááșáááșááŸáŻá á„ááá±ááŸáá·áș áááá·áșáá»ááșáá±áŹ ááœááșáááșááŸáŻáááŻá·ááŒáá·áș áááŻááșáᶠááŸáá·áș ááŒááșáá°á·áĄáá»ááŻážáĄááœááș áá±ážááŹáž ááŒáá·áșáá»áááœáŹážááŒá á±áááŻááŒá±áŹááșáž áŠážáá»á±áŹáșáááșážá áááŻááșááœááșážááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááșá
etone
September 19, 2011 at 10:49 am
áĄááŻá¶ážááááŻáá±áŹá·ááá·áș áá áčá ááșážáá»áŹáž ááŒááșáááșáá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșááá·áș áĄáá±áŹááșážáá±ážáááŻááșáááșáž Flea Market áááŹááŒááșáá±áž ááŒá±ááœááșáááșáá±ááŹááœááș ááœáá·áșááŸá áșááœáá·áșááŒáŻáááș
Tuesday, 13 September 2011 19:04
http://www.news-eleven.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10145:—-flea-market—&catid=43:2009-11-10-07-39-09&Itemid=111
áááááááŻá·á áá±áĄáááșá ááŻá¶ážáááșáž áĄááźážááźážááœááș áĄááŻá¶ážááááŻáá±áŹá· ááá·áș áá áčá ááșážáá»áŹážááᯠááŒááșáááș áá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșááá·áș áĄáá±áŹááșážáá±áž áááŻááșáááșáž Flea Market ááᯠáááșááŻááșááŒááŻá·ááŸá áááŹááŒááșáá±áž ááŒá± ááœááșáááșáá±ááŹááœááș ááœáá·áșááŸá áșáá±áŹááșážáá»ááœáá·áș ááŒáŻááœáŹážáááșááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáș á ááșáááșááŹááŹáá±áž áá±áŹáșáááźá០ááááșážáááŸááááșá
áĄááŒá±áŹááșážáĄáá»ááŻážáá»ááŻážááŒá±áŹáá·áș áĄááŻá¶ážááááŻáá±áŹá·ááá·áș áá áčá ááșážáá»áŹáž ááᯠááŒááșáááșáá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșááá·áș áĄáá±áŹááșážáá±ážááœááșáá áșáᯠáá±áŹáșáá±áŹááșáá±ážááŒááșážááŒá áșááŒáźáž áĄáááșáá±áŹááșááááá±áŹá áá áčá ááșážáá»áŹážá áĄáááșáĄáááșáá»áŹážá áĄááŸááșáááá áčá ááșážáá»áŹážá ááźážáááŻáá»á±áŹááșááŻá¶ážáá áčá ááșážáá»áŹáž á áááșáááŻá·ááᯠááŹáá±áŹááș áá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșáááșáᯠááááááșá
áĄáááșá ááș á áá±ááŸáá·áș ááááșáčáááœá±áá±á·áááŻááșážááœááș ááœáá·áșááŸá áșááœáá·áșááŒáŻááœáŹážáááș ááŒá áșááŒáźáž áá¶áááș á ááŹááźá០ááá± á ááŹááźáá ááœáá·áșááŸá áșáá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșáááșáᯠááááááșá
ááŹáá±áŹááș áá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻáá°áá»áŹáž áĄáá±ááŒáá·áș áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáș á ááșáááșááŹááŹáá±ážáá±áŹáșáááźá áááșááŸááșááŹážááá·áș ááŻááșáá áčá ááșáž áĄáá»ááŻážáĄáááșáĄáááŻááș áááșááŸááșáá±ááŹááœááș áŠážáᏠáá°á áá áșááŒáá·áș áá±ááŹáá°áá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșáááș ááŒá áșááŒáźáž áááŻááșáá±ááŹáá áșáá±ááŹááᯠááŒá±áŹááșáá±áááșáááș áááșááŸááșááŹážáááșáᯠááááááșá
áááááá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááá·áș áá áčá ááșážáá»áŹáž ááᯠáááááĄá áźáĄá ááșááŒáá·áș áá°áá±áŹááșáᏠááááșááŒá áșááŒáźážáá±áŹááșážáá»ááŒáźážáá«ááááșáž áááŻááșááŸáá·áșáááșáááșážáá»ááș ááá·áșááŸááșážáá±áž áááŻááŒáŻááŻááșááœáŹážááááșááŒá áșáááșá ááœáá·áșááŸá áșáá±áŹááșážáá»ááá·áș áááŻáĄááșááá·áș áá áčá ááșážáá»áŹážáááŻáááșážáá°áá±áŹááșáᏠááááșááŒá áșáááșá áááșááŸáááœááș áĄáááČá· ááœáá·áșááŸá áșáá±áŹááșážáá»ááœáá·áșááŒáŻááœáŹáž áááșááŒá áșááŒáźáž áĄááŒá±áĄáá±áĄáááŹáá០áĄááœááșáĄááá»áŹáž áá±áŹááșáá¶ááœáŹážáááș ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá
áááșážáĄá áźáĄá ááșááŸáŹ ááŒááșáᏠáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș áááááŻá¶áž á áááșáá±áŹááș ááœááșááá·áș Flea Market áĄááŒá áșááŒáźáž áááŻááșáá¶áááŹááœááș áá±ááșá áŹážáá»ááșááŒáá·áș ááŸáŻááŸáá áááŻááșáá¶ááŒáŹážááŹážáááźážááœáŹážáá»áŹáž áááșá áááșáááșáá áŹáž ááŹáá±áŹááșáá±á· ááŸááá±áŹ áá±ážáá»áŹážááŒá áșáááșáᯠááááááșá áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáá±áŹáșáá»áŹážáá»áŹážááŸá ááŒááŻá·ááŒáźážáá»áŹážááœááș ááœáá·áșááŸá áșááŹážáááČá· áááŻá· áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá·ááœááșáááșáž áá±áŹáșáá±áŹááșáá±ážááŒááșáž ááŒá áșáááșáᯠááááááșá
áááșážáá±ážáá±ážáááșáá»áŹážáĄáŹáž ááŒá±áá±ááŹáá»ááŹáž áá±áŹááșážáá»ááœáá·áșáá±ážááŒááșážáá»ááŻáž áááŻááșááČ áĄááŻá¶ážááááŻáá áčá ááșážáá»áŹážáĄáŹáž áĄááŻá¶ážáááŻáááŻááșáá°áá»áŹážáᶠááŒááșáááșáá±áŹááșážáá»áááŻááșááá·áș áá±ážááœááșáá áșáᯠáá±áŹáșáá±áŹááșáá±ážááŒááșáž ááŒá áșááŒáźáž á ááșáááșááŹááĄááœááșáž ááœááș ááœáá·áșááŸá áșáááŻááșáááș á áźá ááșáá±ááŒáźááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá
kai
September 20, 2011 at 4:06 am
Burma May Face US Sanctions for Drug-Fighting âFailureâ
Posted Thursday, September 15th, 2011 at 7:32 pm
The United States says Burma may face sanctions for having âfailed demonstrablyâ in its anti-drug efforts.
In a memo to the State Department Thursday, U.S. President Barack Obama said Burma was on a list of 22 countries deemed major drug traffickers or major drug producers.
President Obama said Burma and two other countries â Venezuela and Bolivia â failed demonstrably during the previous 12 months to make substantial efforts to abide by their counterdrug obligations. Officials say that makes those nations eligible for sanctions that include cutting off aid money.
The president waived any possible sanctions against Venezuela and Bolivia, but he did not waive the U.S. right to sanction Burma. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the United States could still choose to continue humanitarian and counternarcotics assistance even without a waiver.
The president is required to compile the annual list to notify Congress of the major drug-producing and drug-transit countries that âsignificantly affectâ the U.S.
The 2011 list includes Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and countries across Central and South America and the Caribbean.
New to the list this year are Belize and El Salvador.
etone
September 22, 2011 at 8:37 am
ááŹáá»á°ááź áááŹ
ááá±á·á(áá.á.áááááááșáá±á·) ááŒáŹážáááŻááșáááČá· ááááșážáá áșááŻááșááŒá±áŹáá·áș á áááșáááșážááá±áŹááșážááá¶áááșáž áá¶ááŒááșážááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áșááź áááŻá·á áșáááŻáááșáááŻááșáá«áááșáááŒá áșááŻá¶áááźáááŻáá«áááá±á·á áááșážáá±áŹáșá ááœááșááŹááČá· áááźážáááșáááșááŸááșááŒá±ážáá±ááŹááșáᏠááœáŸá±áá°ááááŹáááźážáá»ááŻáá·áșááœá± áá»á±áŹáșááŹááŒáźáž áá±áŹááșážááŻááșážáááŻááČá· ááœáŹ áááŻáá±áŹááșáá«áááșááĄáČááźááŸáŹ ááŸááșááŒá±ážáá±ááŹááșáááșááŹááŒáŻááșááŒáźážá§ááŹáááźááŒá áș ááČá áá±á áŻááșáááșáá±ááČá·áá±áááŻááșáá±á«ááșážáá áșááŻááᯠáááșáááŻááșáááá«áááșááá±áááŻááșáá±á«ááșážááŒáźážáᏠááŹá០áĄáá»ááșáĄááźáž áááŸááá±áááș ááŸááșááŒá±ážáá±ááŹááșááČá· áá¶áá¶ááœá±ááá±áŹá· áááá·áșááŸáŻá¶á·ááœáŹážáá«áááșááĄáČááźáĄáá»áááșááŸáŹ áá±áŹááșážááŻááșážááœáŹááČááŸáŹááŸááá±ááČá· áááŻááșáá°áá»ááŻážááœá±áĄáá»áŹážááŒáźáž ááœááșááŹááŒáźáž ááŸááșááŒá±ážáá±ááŹááșáááŻááŒáááŹááŸáŹáá«áááșááĄá¶á·á©á ááŹá ááŒáááŹááŹááŸáŹááČá·áááŻááșááœá±ááČááŸáŹ áááŻááșááČ áá°ááźáá±á«ááșážáááșááŹážááČá·áá°ááœá±áááșáž áá«áááșáááŻá·áááŻáá«áááșááá±áŹááșááŻá¶áž ááŸááșááŒá±ážááŹááșáá±á«áș áááźážáááșáĄááŒá áșáá«ááŹááČá· ááááŻááșáĄááá·áș ááŹááááŻááșááŹáĄááŹááŸáááœá±á áááŻááșáá±á«ááșážáá±áŹááșááœá±ááᯠááœáŹážáá±áŹááșážáááșá០ááŸááșááŒá±ážáá±ááŹááșáááŻáááșáááș ááœááșááœáŹááœáá·áșááŒáŻáá«áááČá·ááá«ááČá· ááźáááŻááșááœá± ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áĄáááșáááŻááșážáá±áŹááșáĄáá ááŻááČá·áááșááČá· ááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áșáá±áŹááșááŸááá±ááŹááČáááŻá·á áŻá¶á ááșážáá±áŹá· ááźáááŻáá«ááČá·ááááŹááááŻááș ááźážáá»ááŻáá·áșááŒááŻá·áááș áá±áŹááșážááŻááșážááœáŹááŸáŹ áááŻááșááœá±á áááčááŻááŸáŹááœá±áá±ážáĄáááșáá¶ááŒáźáž ááŻááčáááźááŹááœáá·áșáá«áááČá·ááááŻááșáá±á«ááșážáá»áŹážá áœáŹáááșážáá«ááŹááŒáźáž á ááșááŻá¶áááșážááŒáźáž áá áșáááșážáááșáá±áŹááșáá«áááșááČá·áá ááșááŻá¶áááșážááŒáźáž áááșáá±áŹááșáá»ááșáááČáááŻáá±áŹá· ááœáŹáá¶ááœá±ááČá·áááșááŒá±ááœá±ááᯠáĄááŻááșááááșážáááŻááșááČá·áĄáá áá»ááșáá«áááČá·ááá±ááá¶ááŒááșááŹáááșáááŹážááœá±ááᯠáá»áŸá±áŹáșááŒá±ážáá áșá§á á áá±áŹááșážááČáá±ážááŒáźáž ááááșážáá°áá«áááČá·ááááșáááŹážááœá±á ááá»á±áááșáááŻá· áááŻááșáá°ááŒáźážááœá±ááᯠááœáŹážáá±áŹááșážáááșáá±áŹá·(ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹááșááČá· áááŻááșááœá±ááᯠááŒááșááŹá á áșá á áșááœá±á áĄáááŹážáá¶ááŹáá±áŹáș.áááșááŹá ááŹáááșáá±áŹááșáá±áŹááșážáááČ)áááșáá»áŹážáááŻááááșááŒá±ááœá±ááᯠá áá±áŹááșážáá±ážááŹáá±áŹááșáá»á±ážáá°ážáááșáá«ááĄá ááŻážáá áááșááŒá±ááœá±áááŻáááŻááșáᏠáááșáá»áŹážáááŻá·áááșááᯠáááșáá»áŹážáááŻá·ááááŻááșáá°ážááĄáááŹáž áááááșážááŹáá±áŹááșáá»á±ážáá°ážáááș áááŻá·ááŒááșááŒá±áŹáááșáááŻá· ááŸááșááŒá±ážáá±á«áșáá«ááŹááČá· áá±áŹááșážááŻááșážááœáŹá áá±ááᶠáááșáááŹážáá áșáŠážáááŒá±áŹáá«áááșááááŻááŒáźáž áááșááŹá ááŹáá±áŹááșážááŹá áĄáČááź áááŻááșá ááșááŻá¶áááșážáĄááœááșážááŸáŹ ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áĄáááșáááșá ááŒááșááŹááááșážááá±áž áááșáááșááŻááŻááŸááŸááœááœááœá±áĄáá»áŹážááŒáźážáĄááŻááșááŻááșáá±ááŒáááșááČá·áááŹáĄááŻááșááŸááșáž ááááá±ááá·áșáá áșáááᯠá ááááșážááá± ááááááșážáĄáááá±ážáááŻá·.áááčááá±ážááŹááŹáĄááŻáá±á ááá±ážááá±ážááœá±áá±áŹááș á ááșááŻá¶áááșážááČáá±áŹááșááŸá áĄááŻááșááŻááșáááŻááșáá±ááŒáááșááČá·áááœáŹáá¶ááœá±áĄáá±ááČá· áááŻááșááœá±ááČá· áĄáááŻááșáá»áá·áșááŸáŻááœá±áááșáž áá¶ááááșááČá·áááźáá±áŹá· áááŻááșáá¶ááČá· áá°áá»ááŻážááᯠáĄáááșáá±ážáá»á áșáááșáááŻááČá·áá°ááŒáźážáááșážáá»áŹážááᯠáĄáááŹážáá¶áá±áŹááșážáááșáá«áá á±áááŒááșááŹáá°ááŻááČá·ááźááŻááčáááœá±ááᯠáááșáááșáá±ážááŒáá«áŠážáááŻá·…
ááŹáá»á°ááź(áááŹ)
http://www.facebook.com/herjulekatha/posts/159159470839577
Ko Ko Aung
September 22, 2011 at 11:03 am
ááŒááșááŹáááșááŹážááœá±ááŸáŹáá«áááșááČá· áááŻáááŻááźáá±ááșáĄááŒá±áᶠáááșáááșáááșážáá»ááŻážááᯠáááááááááșá áá»á áșááźážááŻááŹážááŒáźážá ááŻááááșááœá±áá±á«áșááŹááŒáźáž ááœáŹááŹážááœá±ááČá· áá»áœáČááœáŹáž áááșáᏠáááźážáááŹááœá± áĄáááșážááááșáž áĄáááŻááșáá»áá·áșááŹáá»ááŻážáá±…á
áĄááŻááČ áá»á áșááźážáááŻááșááŒáźážááœá± áá°áááŻá·ááČá·áááŻáááŻááźááŻááááș áá°áááŻá·ááČá·áááŻáááŻááźá á áșááŹážááœá±áááŻáá±á«áșááŹááŒáźáž áĄáááŻááșáá»áá·áșááŹáá»ááŻáž ááŒááșááŹáá»áŹážááŹáá ááŒááșááŹááŒááșáá±á«ááș ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááŹáž áááŻááșááŻááŹáž áá°áá»ááŻážáá»áŹážáá«ááá»ááș áá«ážáá±áŹá·áĄá±áŹááșáá¶áá±ááŒááá«ááŒáźá
ááŒááșááŹáá»áŹáž áááŻááșážáááșážááŹážááźáĄáááŻáá»áŹáž áĄáááááș ááááááșááŒáááŻá· áááŻáá«ááŒáźá áá«áá»ááŻážáááșáááșááá áčá ááœá± ááźáááŸá áșáááŸá áșáá±áŹááșáĄááœááșážááŸáŹ áá±áŹáșáá±áŹáșáá»ááșáá»ááșááŒáá·áșááŒáá·áș ááŒá áșááœáŹážáá±áá«áááșá
etone
September 22, 2011 at 1:29 pm
Ko Ko Aung áá±.. áá»ááșá áááČ ááŒááșáááááŻá· ááœáŹážááŒá±áŹáá»áŸááșáá»áŹáž áá»áœááșááááŻá·á ááŻá¶ááŻááșážáááŻá·áááŻá· áá°áááŻá·ááᯠáá áœááșáá°ážáá±áž ááŹáá±ážááŒá áșáá±ážáááș … ááźáá±áŹá·áááșáž … áááŻážááá¶áá»ááŻáž ááźážáááŻáááŻážáá»ááșááŹááČ ááá±áŹááČá·… ááááŻááșáááᯠááŒáá·áșáá±áááŻááșáá±áŹá·áááș .. á
kai
September 23, 2011 at 6:23 am
áááșááŒááșááœáŹážáááșážááœá±á·ááŸáááŒááșáž.. đ
Roll Over Einstein: Law of Physics Challenged
ABC News – â1 hour agoâ
One of the very pillars of physics and Einstein’s theory of relativity – that nothing can go faster than the speed of light – was rocked Thursday by new findings from one of the world’s foremost laboratories.
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/roll-einstein-law-physics-challenged-14585328
Foreign Resident
September 26, 2011 at 2:10 pm
ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááœááș ááá± á· áá¶ááŹá·áĄáá±ážáĄáááșáž á ááŸá áșááŒáá·áșáá± á·áĄááŒá áș áá»ááșážááá±ááŒáźáž áááčáááŒáá±áááșáᯠááááŸáá áááșá áááčáááŒáá°áá»áŹáž ááŸáŹ áááŻážáááșážáááșá áœáŹááœáŹáá±ááá·áșááŒáŹážá០áĄáá«áá±áŹááșáĄáá»áź ááșáčááœá±áááșáá°áááșá áá°áá±ááŻááŹážááᯠáá»áźáááșááŹáá±ááŒááŒáźáááŻá· ááááșážáááŸááá«áááșá ááŒááŻá·áá±áŹáșáááșážáááŸá±á·ááŸáŹáá±áŹá· ááČááœá± áĄááŒá±áŹááșáĄáá»áŹáž áááșáá»ááșá áœáŹ áá»ááŹážáá«áááșááᯠᷠááááááșá áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá·á០áá°áĄáá»áŹáž áĄáá±ááŒáá·áș áááŻááááșáž ááŸááșááŸááș áĄáááșááŒáŻáá±ážááŒáá«áááŻá· áá±ážá áŹážá áœáŹ áá±ááčááŹáááșáá¶áááŻáá«áááș áááșáá»áŹ á
áá»áá±áŹáșáááŻá· áááŻááșážááŒááșááČá· áá±áŹááșááŻá¶ážáá±á·áááșáá»áŹáž ááá±áŹááșáááș ááŒááŻáááșááŹážááźážáá±ážáááŻá· áĄááœááș ááŒááșááŹááá°ááșáá¶ááŹážáĄáŹááŻá¶áž
áá°ážáá±á«ááșážáá«áááș áá±áŹááșááœááșáá±ážááŒáá«áááŻá· áá±ážá áŹážá áœáŹ áááŻááșááœááșážááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááŻáá«áááș áááșáá»áŹ á
áááčáááŒáá±áááș áááŻáᏠááŸááșáááș.. ááČááœá±áá»ááŹážááŹáááșážááŸááșáááș⊠ááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áșááŒáá±ááČ ááŹáá±áŹááșážáááŻáá±ááČ ááá±áá»áŹáá±ážáá°áž áĄáááŻâŠ
áá±á«áșáá±áŹáșáĄáŻá¶ážááŸáááŻá· áŠážáá±áŹááșááŒáźáž áááșááŻááșááŸáŹ áĄáᯠáááčáááŒáá±áá«áááș áááŻá·ááááșážáááŸááá«áááșá
áá°ááá áá±áŹááșááŸááááșáááŻá·ááááá«áááșá
ááááșážááŻááșážááŒááŻá·áĄáááșáááșážááááá±áž ááŻááșááŸááșááŻá¶ááŸá±á·ááĄáá±áŹááș ááČá ááŻááșá ááá áááșááČá„ááá±áĄá áĄáá±ážáá°áááșáááŻá· ááŻáá·áșááŒááșááŹáááșáááŻá·áááŻáá«áááșáááČáááŒáááșážááŒá±áŹááșááŹááŒá áșáá«áááșá
ááŒá áșááŻá¶ááá áčá áČá· ááœáŸá±áá«áá±áŹááșáááŸá áșááŒáá·áșááŸáŻááșááŸáŹážááŸáŻáááŻá·áá°áááá«áááșááĄááŻáá¶ááŹážáá±ážáááșážááŻá¶áááŻážáá±áááá±áŹááșáá±ááŒáź áááŻá·ááááá«áááșá
7days ááá±áŹá· ááźáááŻáá±ážááŹážáááș *** áááŻááșáá¶áá±ážáĄáá»ááșážááŹážáá»áŹážááœáŸááșáá±ážáá« á áŹáááșážáá«áá±áŹáĄáá»á áĄáá«áá±áŹááșáá»áŹážáááŻáá°ááźá áœáŹáááșáááșááŹážááá·áș áá°áĄáá±áŹááșááá ááá·áșáááș ááá±á· áá±á·áááșáááŹááźááá·áșáááčááŹáĄá±ážááŻááŹážáááșážáĄáááŻááșážáá»áźáááșááŹáᏠáááŻážáá±ááááŸáá·áșáááá±áááŻá¶ážááŸá±á·áĄáá±áŹááșááœááș ááŻá¶ááŒáŻá¶áá±ážááČáá»áŹážáááŹážááźážáááŒáá·áș áááșážáá±ážááœááșáááŻááșááŹáááșáĄáŻááșáá»áźááŻáá±áŹááșážááŸáŻá·áá»áŹážááŒáŻááŻááșáá»áŸááșááŸááááșáᯠáá»ááșááŒááșááœá±á·ááŸááá°áá»áŹážáááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááșá
“áĄá±áŹáșááŹáá áșááŹáááŸááá«áá°áž á ááŒáááșááŒáááșáá±ážááČááŸááááŻážááŒáźážááŻáá±áŹááșážáá±ááŒáááșá ááŹááœá±ááŻáá±áŹááșážááČáááŻáᏠáá±ážáá±áŹá· áááŒáŹážááá°áž”áᯠáááŻáá±
ááŹááœááșáá±áŹááșááŸááá±áá°áá áșáŠážáááŻááșážááŒáá·áșááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááșá
áĄáá«áá±áŹááșáĄáá»ááááșáá°áá»áŹážáááșáááșááŹážááá·áșáá°áá áșááŹááœááș áĄáááșááá០á á áĄáá áĄáá»ááŻážááŹážááĄáá»ááŻážáááźáž áĄááœááșá áŻá¶áá«áááșááŒá±áŹááșážáááșážá ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááșá
“ááČááœá±áááŻá¶ááŒáŻá¶áá±ážááœá±ááČá· áááșááœááșááá°ááŒáźážááœá±á áá°ááááá±áŹááșááŸááááșá áááșážáááááșáĄá±áŹááș ááŹááșááááșážáááŸááșážáá±ážáá±áááșá áááșááœááșááČá áááșážááŒáŹážááŸáŹáá±áŹá· áááșáááșáĄááŒáá·áșááČá·ááŻá¶ááŒáŻá¶áá±ážááŹážáá áșá ááșážáááșáá±ááŹááŸááșážááœá±á·ááááș” áᯠáááŻáá±ááŹáĄááźážááœááșáá±áŹááșááŸááá±áá°áá áșáŠáž áááŒá±áŹáááșá
áááŻáá±ááŹáááșáááŹáĄá±ážááŻááŹážáááșážááá±á«áș á áááŻážáá±ááááŸáá·áșáááá±áááœáŸááșááŒáŹážááŸáŻá·áŠážá áźážááŹáááŸá±á· á ááááșážááŻááșážááŒááŻá·áááșááœááșááŒá áșáááșá ***
http://www.facebook.com/burmathway
Foreign Resident
September 26, 2011 at 2:33 pm
ï»ż
áá° ááá ááá·áșáá«áá±áŹ áááčáááŒááŸáŻ áá áșááŻááŒá áșááœáŹážá áĄáá»ááŻážááŹáž áááșááŒáŹážá á±á·áá±ážááᯠáá»ááșááŒáŹážá á±áá±áŹ áĄááŸá±áŹááșáĄááŸááș ááŻááșáá±áŹááșááŸáŻááŒá áșááŒáźáž áááșááá¶ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááșážá ᏠáááŹááŒáźážáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áá°áá»áŹážá ᯠááŒá±áŹááŒáŹáž
áá° ááá ááá·áșáá«áá±áŹ áááčáááŒááŸáŻáá áșáᯠááá±á·ááœááșážááœáČáááŻááșážááœááș áááșááŻááșááŒááŻá· áááá±áž ááŻááșááŸááșááŻá¶ áĄááźáž áááčááŹáĄá±ážááŻááŹážáááșáž áá±á«áșááœááș ááŒá áșááœáŹážááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááșážáááŸááááșá áááșážááá áčá ááŸáá·áș áááșáááșá áĄáá»ááŻážááŹáž áááșááŒáŹážá á±á·áá±ážááᯠáá»ááșááŒáŹážá á±áá±áŹ áĄááŸá±áŹááșáĄááŸááș ááŻááșáá±áŹááșááŸáŻááŒá áșááœáŹážááŒáźáž áááșááá¶ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááșážá áŹáááŹááŒáźážáá»áŹážááŸáá·áș áá°áĄáá»áŹážá áŻá ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááČá·ááŒáá«áááșá âááŒá áșááŻá¶áá±ááŹáᏠááá áčá áá áșáááŻááșáá¶ááŻá¶áž á áááșááá±áŹááșážááŒá áșáá±áᏠááᯠááŹážáááșáá«áááșá áĄá ááŻážááĄáá±ááČá· ááŒááșáááșááŸáááŸááŻááșážáá±ážáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹáááŻááŹážááŒááŒáźáž ááŒá áșáá«áááșá ááźáááŻáĄáá»áááșááŸáŹ áááčáá á±áŹáᏠáááŒá áșááá·áșáá°ážá áá áșááá·áș ááŒáźážáá áșááá·áș áá°áááșáá»á±ážáááșážááČá· ááŒá±ááŸááșážáááŻááșáááŻá· áĄáá»áááșáá±ážááá·áșáááșá ááźáááŻááŹááᯠáĄááŒá±áŹááșážááŒáŻááŒáźáž áĄáá»ááŻážááŹážáááșááŒáŹážá á±á·áá±ážááᯠááááŻááŹážááČá·áá°ááœá± á áá»ááșáááŻáá»ááșá áźážááŻááșááá·áș áĄááčáááŹááșá ááŒáźážááŹážáááșá ááŒááșáá°áá áșáááșááŻá¶ážáĄáá±ááČá· á áááșááŸááșáááŻá·áááŻáá«áááșâáᯠáá«ááá·áșááááșážá áŹááᏠáá°ááŻá áááșáááșáž á ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááČá·áá«áááșá
âáááŒáŹááźááŸáŹ ááœááșááŒáááșážáá»ááșážááŹááœáá·áș (Amnesty)ááŸááááșá áááŻááșážááŒááșáááșááŒáááșááŸáŻááČá· áĄáá° áááŻááșáá¶áá±ážáĄáá»ááșážááŹážááœá± ááœáŸááșáááŻá·ááŸááááșá ááŒá áșááŻá¶ááŒáżááŹááŒá±ááŸááșážáááŻá·ááŸááááșá ááŒá áșááŻá¶ááŒáżááŹá áááșáž ááŒá±ááŒá±áááșáááș ááŒá áșááœáŹážááŸáŹáá«á áááșááŸáááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶áá±áž áá±áá»áááșá Arab style uprising ááŒá áșá ááŹáááŸááá«áá°ážá áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșááááșáž ááźáááŻááŒá±áŹááŹážáááșá ááźáááŻáááčáááŒááŸáŻááœá±ááᯠáááșáá°á០áááŻááșá á±áá»ááșáá°ážá áááŻááșážááŒááșááááșáááŒáááșááŒá áșáááș ááźáááŻááá±á áźáĄááœááșáá°ážááŒá±áŹááșážáá±áž ááŸá±áŹáá·áșááŸá±ážááœáŹážáááș áááŻááșáá¶áá±áž áĄáá»ááșážááŹážááœá± áĄáá±ážááŸá±áŹáá·áșááŸá±ážááœáŹážáááșá áá«ááᯠáááșáá°ááœá±á ááŻááșáá»ááșáá±ááŒááŹááČá áá¶ááŹáĄáá±ážáĄáááșáž ááŸá áșáááșáááșááČááŒá áșááŒá áșá ááŒá áșááŻá¶ááá áčá ááČááŒá áșááŒá áș áĄááŻáá»áááșááŸáŹ ááŹáááčáááŒááŸáŻáááŻá០áá»áœááșáá±áŹáș áááŒá áșá á±áá»ááșáá°ážá âááŻá¶ážáâ áááșááá¶áá°ážá áá±áŹááșááœááșá áĄááŒá±áŹááșážááᯠáá±áŹáșááŻááșááááșá áááșáá°ááœá±á ááŻááșáá±ááŒááŹááČá áá«ááᯠáĄááŒá±áŹááșážááŒááŒáźáž áááŻááșáá¶áááŻážáááșáá±ážá áĄáá»ááŻážááŹážááŒááșáááș áááșááŒáŹážá á±á·áá±ážááᯠáá áșááŹáĄá±áŹááș ááŻááșáááș áááŻáááșáá±áŹá· ááœáČááœáŹážáááá·áșáááșâáᯠEleven Media Group á CEO áá±á«ááșááŹáááșážááœááșáĄá±áŹááșá ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáá«áááșá
“áááŻá¶ááŒááŻá·áá áșáááșááá± ááźáĄááșááŹážááœá±ááŸáŹážááŒáźáž ááŹááŒááŹáááŻá· ááááááșá áááșáááŻááșáᏠááŹáááșááŸááá°ááœá±á ááŹážáááŻá· ááźááŹážááŸáŹáááșá áŻááŒáźáž áĄááŻááᯠáá°áááŻá·áááčáááŻááșáá±áŹáșááŹáááŻá· ááááááșá áĄááŻáá±áŹá· ááŹáááșááŸááá°ááœá±á áá°á áŻááœáČáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹáá±ááŹá± ááœá·ááááșá ááŒá±áŹáá¶ááŒáŹážááŹááá±áŹá· áááá á ááșáááșááŹááŒá áșá ááș ááŸá áșáááșáááșááŻáá±áŹááșážááŒáááŻá· ááœááșááŹááŒááŹáááŻá· ááááááșá ááŹááČááŒá áșááŒá áș áĄááŻáááŻáĄááŒá±áĄáá±áá»ááŻážááŸáŹ ááááŻááŹážáĄááșááČá· ááŸáŻááșááœá±ážááŸáŻááœá± áááŒá áșá á±áá»ááșáá«áá°ážá áááŒá áșáááșáž áááŒá áșááá·áșáá«áá°áž”áᯠáĄáááŻáá«ááŒá áșá ááșááᯠáá»ááșááŒááșááœá±á·ááŸááá° áá áșáŠážá ááŒá±áŹááŒáá«áááșá
áŠážáááșážááŒááŻááș (áĄááœá±ááœá±áĄááœááșáž áá±ážááŸá°ážá ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáᶠáá«ážááŻááșáááșáž áĄááœáČá·áá»áŻááș)
âááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáá¶ááČá· ááźáááŻááá±á áźáááșážá ááșááŸáŹ áá¶áá«ááșáá áșááŻááčáááŻááșáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹáááŻá·áááČá· áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááș áĄáá±ááČá·áá±áŹááș ááŒááșááŹáᏠáĄáŹáááșáááčááŹááᯠáááŒá áșááá·áșáá°ážá áĄáČááźáááŻáááșážá ááșáá»ááŻáž áááŻááșááá·áșáá°ážáááŻááČá· áĄááááčááŹááșáá»ááŻáž áĄáᯠááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááŹážááŒáźážááŹážáá«á áĄááŻááᯠáááșážá ááșáá»ááŻážááᯠááá±áŹáșáá±áŹááșáááŻá· áĄááááčááŹááșáááșáž áááșáá±áŹááșáááᯠááá±áŹáșáá±áŹááșááá·áșáá°ážáááŻá· ááŒááșáááșá áĄááŻáááșáž áááŻááșáááŻáá»ááșááŹááᯠááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáĄáá áááșááŒááœáá·áșáááŹáááșá áááŻáá·áșáĄáááșáĄááČ áááŻááșáááșááŒááœáá·áșá áááŻááșááŒááșáá±áŹááșážáááŻááœáá·áșáĄáá ááá±áááșá áááŻáááŻááŹá ááŒáááșážááŒáááșážáá»ááșážáá»ááșážááČá· áá±áŹááșážáááŻááœáá·áșá ááááŹážááŹáááŻáááșáž ááŻááșáá±áŹáșááŒá±áŹáááŻááœáá·áșááá±ááČá· áĄáá±áĄááŹážáá«á ááźáááŻááá±á áź áááșážááŒá±áŹááșážáá±á«áș áá±áŹááșáááŻá· ááŹá á°áá±ááČá· áĄáá»áááșá áĄááŸáááșá ááá±ááČá· ááŹááá»ááŻážááŸáŹ ááźááᯠáááșážááŒá±áŹááșážáá»ááŻážááᯠáá±áŹáșáá±áŹááșáááŻá· áááá·áșáá«áá°ážá áĄááŻááᯠáá°ááŻáĄáŻá¶ááŒáœááŸáŻááᯠáŠážáááșááČá·áááșážááŒá±áŹááșážáá»ááŻážááᯠáá±áŹáșáá±áŹááșáááŻá· áááșáááŻááșáᏠá á áșáááșá áá áșáá«áĄáŹááŹááŒááșááááșážááŒáźáž ááŸá áșáá±á«ááșážáá»áŹážá áœáŹ ááŒááșá á±áŹáá·áșáááŹáá»ááŻážá áááșááŸá áááșááŒááœáá·áșááá±ááČá· áĄáá±áĄááŹážááœá±ááá± ááááșááœáŹážáᏠáá»ááŻážááŒá áșááČá·áááșáá±áŹá· áĄááŻááᯠááŒá áșáĄá±áŹááș ááŻááșááČá·áá°ááœá±á ááááŻááșážááČá·áááŹážáᶠááŒá áșááœáŹážááŸáŹááČá áĄááŻááᯠáĄá±ážáĄá±ážáá»ááșážáá»ááșážááČá· ááźáááŻááá±á áźáááșážááŒá±áŹááșážáááș áŠážáááșáá±ááČá·áĄáá»áááș áá«áá»ááŻáž ááŒáŹážááᏠáááșááœááșáá»ááșáá áșáá»ááŻážááČá·áá»áŹáž ááŻááșáááŹážáááŻá·áá±áŹááș áááșáááááșá áĄáᯠáĄáá»áááșááŸáŹ áá»áœááșáá±áŹáș ááŒááșááŹááá±áŹá· áááŻááșáááŻáá»ááșááŹááᯠáĄá±ážáĄá±ážáá»ááșážáá»ááșáž áá±áŹááșážáá°áááŻá· ááá±ááČá· áĄáá±áĄááŹáž áá±áŹááșá ááŒáŻáá±áá«ááŒáźáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹáá»ááșáá«áááșâ
áááșáááșáá±áŹáșááŒáá«áááș
—http://www.news-eleven.com—
etone
September 26, 2011 at 3:30 pm
http://www.first-11.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10281%3A2011-09-26-07-20-27&catid=42%3A2009-11-10-07-36-59&Itemid=112
kai
September 26, 2011 at 3:44 pm
ááá»á±áááșááŹááᯠ..áááčáááŒááœáá·áșááá±áŹá·.. áĄáá»áááșáááœá±ážáá±ááŹáááœá±ážááŸááááŻááșááááșáááșáá«áááș..á
ááŻá¶ááŒáŻá¶áá±ážááŹáááșáá°ááŹážáá°ááœá±áááŻ.. ááŒááŻáááșáĄááŒá±áŹááșážááŒáŹážáááŻááșáááșáááŻáá±áŹááșážááŹáá±á«á·..á
áĄááŒááșážááááșáááŻá·ááČáááŻááŹáá«..á
áá±á«áșá áŻá.. áá±ááźáááŻááá±ááŒáźáž.. áá«ááŸáááŻááș.. ááœááșážáááșážááŒáźáž.. áááčááá á±áŹááŒáá«ááČá·..ááá á±áŹáá·áșááŒáá·áșáá«.. áĄáááșááŒááșááŒáá«áááŻá·.. ááŒá±áŹáááŻááșáááŻá·áá±áŹááșážáááș..á
áááčáááŒáá±áá°ááœá±.. áĄáŹážááŻá¶ážááááșáĄáááșááŒááșááœáŹážáááŻá·áááșážáááŻáááș…áá±á«á·..á đ
kai
September 27, 2011 at 3:52 am
ááŹážáááș-áááșáá»ááá°ááź áááŹážáááșážáá±áŹááșáááș á áźá ááș
á á±áŹááŒáá·áșáááșáž (áá±á«ááșáá±áŹ)
áááșááŻááșá á ááșáááșáᏠá- á„áá±áŹáááŸáá·áșáĄáŹááŸáá»áááșáááșááá·áș ááááșáĄá±ážááŸáŹážáááŹážáááșážáááŻááșážááœááș ááᏠáá»á°ááŹáá»ááŹááá·áș ááŹážáááșáá±áááșááááșáááșážááŸáá·áș áááșáá»ááá°ááźáááŻáá»áááșáááșááá·áș áááŹážáááșážáá±áŹááșááŻááșáááș á áźá ááșáá±ááŒáźááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŹážáááŻá·áá±áŹááșáá±ážáááșááŒáźážááŹá ááŒááșáá±áŹááșá áŻáááșááŒáźážáŠážáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá ááŒááșááœááșážááźááźáᏠáá»áŹážááŸáá·áșááœá±á·ááŻá¶á ááș ááŻááșáá±áŹáșááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážáááșá
ââáááŹážáááșážáá áșááŻááᯠáááșááŒáźážá ááŹážáááŻáá±áá«áááșá ááźáááșážááá±áŹá· áááźážááááșáá±á«ááșáááșá áĄá±áŹááș ááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŸáŹááŸáááČá· ááŹážáááșáá±áááșááááșáááșážááá± áááŻááșážáááŻááșáᶠáááșáá»ááá°ááźááᯠááœáŹážááá·áșáááșáž ááŒá áșáá«áááșá áá»áœááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáᶠáĄááœááșážááŸáŹ áááŻááș áááá±áŹááșáá±áŹááșááááșá ááźáááŹážáááșážáá±áŹááșááČá·áĄáá«ááŸáŹááČ áá°áááș- áá»á±áŹááșááŒá°áááŹážáááșážáá±áŹááșáááᯠáááŻááșáᶠááœá± ááŒááșááŹááŒááșááŸáŹááČ áá»ááșááČá·áĄá±áŹááș ááŻááș ááááșá áááŻáá·áșáááŻááșáá¶ááŹážááœá± áĄááŻááșáááŸá áĄá±áŹááș áá±áŹááșááœááșáá±ážáááșá ááŹááČááŒá áșááŒá áș áá±áŹááșáá áșáá»áááșááŸáŹáá±áŹá· á áźážááœáŹážáá±áž ááááș áá±áŹááșážááŹáááșáááŻá·ááœááșáá«áááșââáᯠááŒááș áá±áŹááșá áŻáááșááŒáźážá ááŒá±áŹáááșá
ââáá±áŹáá±áŹáááșáĄáá±ááČá· ááź áá»á±áŹááșááŒá°-áá°áááș áááŹážáááșážáááŻááșážááᯠáááŻááșáááŻááșáá¶á áááŹááŸááșááŻá¶ážááœáČá· ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșáᶠááŸáŹ áááŻááșážááŹááŸáŻááœá± ááŒáŻááŻááșáá±ááŒáźááŒá áșáá«áááșá ááźáááŹážáááșážáááŻááČ ááŹážáááșáá±áááș ááááș áááșážááČá·áááșáá»ááá°ááźááᯠáá»áááșáááșááá·áș áááŹáž áááșážáááŻááČ á ááŹážáááŻáá±áá«ááŒáźá áá°áááș áá»á±áŹááșááŒá°áááŹážáááșážááᯠááźááŸá áș ááźáááșáᏠááá±áŹááșááŸáŹ áá±áŹááșááŻááșáááŻááșáááá·áșáááșáááș áá«áááșá á áááșáá±áŹááșááŻááșááŒáźáááŻáááșáá±áŹá· áá«ážááŸá áșáĄááœááșáž áĄááŒáźážáááșáá±áŹááșááœáŹáž ááŸáŹááŒá áșáá«áááșá ááźáááŹážáááșážáá±áŹááșááŻááș áááŒááșáž áááșááœááșáá»ááșááá±áŹá· ááŒááșááŹááŒááș á ááœááșááČá· áĄáŻááșá ááČá áá»á±áŹááșááœá±ááᯠáá±áŹááșážáááșá áááŻááșáá¶ááŹážááœá±ááᯠáĄááŻááș áááŸááĄá±áŹááș áá±áŹááșááœááșáááșá áá±áŹááșááŻá¶ážá ááș áá±áŹááșážááœá±ááĄá áĄááŻááșáááŸáŹááŒá áșáá«áááșá ááŻááșááœááșááœá± áĄáá»áŹážááŒáźážáá±á«áșááŹáááŻááșáá±áŹá· ááŸáŹááŒá áșáá«áááșá áá«áá±ážááᯠáá»áœááșáá±áŹáșáááŒá áș ááŒá áșáĄá±áŹááș ááŒááŻážá áŹážáá±áá«áááșá áĄááŻááᯠáááș ááź Project ááČá· ááŹážááŸááŻážááČá·áá°áááș Feasibility Study Report ááŒáźážááœáŹážááŒáźá á áŹáĄáŻááșááČ ááœááșááŹááŒáźââáᯠááŒááșáá±áŹááșá ᯠáááșááŒáźážá ááŒá±áŹáááșá
áááŻááșážáᏠááŒáźážá áźážááœáŹážááŒáźááŒá áșááá·áș áá°áááș-ááŹááŸááŻáž áááŹážáááșážáááŻááșážááœááș áááșáž áĄááŸááș ááá ááá ááá ááźáááŻááźáᏠ(áá ááá áá áááŻááș)ááŸááșááŒáźáž áá¶ááŹáž áá á ááșážá áá±ááŒááș ááá ááŻá á„áááșáááŻááșáá±á«ááșáž áá ááŻá áá°áᏠááŻáá áșáᯠááŸáá·áș ááá·áșááŸááșážááŻááșáá» á ááááș áááșáá±á«áșáᏠáááșáž áááá ááŻááșáá» áááșááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááááșá
ââááźáááŹážáááșážáááŻááșážááœá±áᏠᄠáá±áŹáááČá· áĄáŹááŸáá»áááșáááșááá·áș ááááșáĄá±áž ááŸáŹážáááșážáááŻááșáž á ááșááŹáá°-áá°áááșážáááŹážáááșážá ááŒáźážá áá±áŹááșááŒá±áŹááșá áĄááŸá±á·áĄáá±áŹááș áááșážáááŒáźážááœá±ááČá· áĄá áááșáĄáááŻááșážááœá±ááŒá áș áááŻá· áááŹáá»á°ááŹáĄá áĄáá±ážáá«ááŹáááŻá·ááŸááááșá áĄááááčááááČá· áá»áááșáááșáááŻá·áá±áŹá· áá»ááșááŹáá±á«á·á ááŒááșááŹáááŻááșážáá»áááșáááșááŒáźážáááș áááčááá±áž-áá°áááș ááœáŸá±ááźáááșážáááŻááșážááœá±ááČá· áá»áááșáááșááČá·áĄáá« ááČáá±á«ááșáá±áááŒá áșááČá· áááŻááșá ááźáááșáááșá ááŹáĄááŻá ááČá· áááŻááșáá¶ááœá±ááČá· áááșááááœáŹážáááșá áá«ááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááźáááșážáááŻááșáž (ááŒááșááŹ-áááŻááșáž)ááᯠáĄááŒááșááŻá¶áž áĄáá±áŹááșáĄáááșáá±áŹáșááá·áșáá« áááșá ááŒááșááŹááČá·áááŻááșážá ááŻááááááčááŹá á áș ááŻááșážá áááșážáááŻááșážááŒá áșááČá· áá¶ááŒá°ááááșááČá· áááșáá»ááá°ááźáááșážáááŻááșážá ááŸáááŒáźážááŹážááČá ááŒááșáááș áááŻááșáááș ááŒáźážááœáŹážááŒáźá áĄááŒááșááŻá¶ážááŻááșáááŻááș áá± ááŒááșááŹáĄááœááș áĄáá»ááŻážááŒááșááŒááșááŸááá± ááČââáᯠá áźážááœáŹážáá±ážááŻááșáááșážááŸááșááŒáźážáá áșáŠážá ááŒá±áŹáááșá smthan@yangonmedia.com
http://www.yangonmedia.com/news/news_detail.asp?nid=4511
nozomi
September 30, 2011 at 11:05 am
áááșáčááᏠááááșážáá±ážáá« áĄááŻááČ weekly website ááŸáŹ áááșááŹážááŹáá«
â Breaking News: ááŒá áșááŻá¶áááș áááșáá±áŹááșááŒááșážááᯠáááááááŻá·áĄá ááŻážááááșáááșááœááș áááșáááŻááșážááŹážáááșááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáááčááá ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· ááááșááœáŸáŹáá±ážáááŻá· (ááááșážáĄáá±ážá áááșááᯠáááșáááșáá±áŹáșááŒáá«áááșá) â
king
September 30, 2011 at 11:41 am
ááźááááș áĄááááá±áŹááșááŹážáĄááșááŒáźážáááŻá· ááŹážáĄááșááČá·áĄááŒá±áŹááșážáá±ážááŒá±áŹááŒá áșáááșá á.á.áááŸáŹ ááá áá»ááșááČáá»ááŒá±áŹááșážá áĄáČááźáá±áŹááș ááŹážááᯠááŻá¶ážááᯠáááșááœááș á á áșáááșááŹááșáĄáááŻáá áčá ááșážááŹážááœááșážáááŻááŹážá áĄáČááźááŸáŹ áá±áŹáșáá±áŹáșááŹážááᯠááœáŹážáá±áŹááșáĄááșááŸá¶ááá«ááŒá±áŹááșážá áĄáČááź ááœááșážááŒáźážááČááŸáŹ ááááșáá±ážááŻáá±áŹááșááᯠááŒááșáááŒá±áŹááșáž á áááááșááᯠáááá áá»ááșááČá· áááșáááșáááșáááŻážáá»áŹáž áĄááźááźáá±ážáááŒá±áŹááșážá á áŻá áŻáá±á«ááșáž ááááá áá»ááșáá±áŹááș ááŻááșááŒáá±áŒ…ááŹááșážá áááșááŒááșá áááșááŹážáá»áŹážá áĄááČáĄáááŻáááŻáááșáž ááŹážáĄááșáá°ááŒááșáá°áá»áŹáž áá¶ááŒáááŒá±áŹááșážá áááșážáááŻá· ááŻááșážááœá±ááááșááŹážáááŻááșá áĄááŻááșááŻá¶ážááááșážáá áșáááŻááșááááŹážá á áááșááŒáá·áș ááŒáŻáá°ááŒá±áŹáááŻááŒááŒá±áŹááșážá (áá á)áááșáá±áŹááș ááĄáááșáááșážá áźááŒáźáž áĄááșáááŒá±áŹááșážá á áŹážá ááŹáááŻááșáá»áŹážáááșáááŸáá áĄááŻá០ááœáá·áșááœáá·áșáá±ážáá±áŹ á áŹážáá±áŹááșáááŻááșáá»áŹážááœáá·áșááŹááŒáź ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșážá áááșááá±áŹáșááŹážáá»áŹážááŸáŹ ááŹážáĄááșáááŻáááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáááșáž ááŹážáá»ááŻážá áŻá¶ááŒá áșááá·áșáĄááœááș ááá»ááŻá·ááŹážáá»áŹážááᯠááČáááŒá áșáááșááŒá±áŹááșážá á.á.á á áá»áœááșážáá»ááșáááșáááșážáá»áŹážááᯠáááŻááșááá·áșáĄááœááș ááŹážáááșáá±ážáááŒá±áŹááșážá ááČáááŒá áșáááșááá·áș áĄááșáá»ááșáĄááœááș áá¶áá±áá¶áá±á«áșááœááș áĄáŻá¶ááŹááœááș á áŹáĄáŻááșá០á áŹááŻá¶ážáĄáááŻááșážáá áșááŻá¶ážá áźááČááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșážá áááŻá·ááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááČááŒá áșá áŹááœááșáá±á«áșá០á áŹááŻá¶ážáá»áŹážááŸáŹ ááŒá±áŹáá·áșáááșáž ááá±ááČ ááœá±á·áá±áŹááșáá±ááŒá±áŹááșážá áááŻá·ááŒá±áŹáá·áș ááŹááșáĄááșáá°á០ááŒá áșááČá·ááŹážá ááŒáááŹáááșáááșá ááŻážááá·áșáĄááœááș áá±ážááŹá ááá áčá áááŸááá«á áá»áœááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá·á á áșáááșáááŻáá±áŹá· á.á.á áááŻáááŻááșááČá·áĄááœááș áĄáááșá០ááŒááșáá á áșááŒá±áŹááșážá áĄáááș á á áșáááŻááșá០áááșáž áááșážáááŻá· ááČáááŒá áșáááșáááșáž âáĄááșâáᏠááŻáᯠááŒá±áŹááŹážááŒá±áŹááșážá ááŹááșáĄááșáááșáá¶ááŹááœááș ááŹá០áááááČááŹááŹáĄáá»ááŻážáĄá áŹážá áĄá±áŹáșáááșáá»ááșáááș áááșáááŻááșááŻááșáááŻááșáá±ážááŒá±áŹááșážá áá±ážááŹáá±ážáááșá ááŹáá»áŸ áááááŒá±áŹááșážá áĄáá»ááș (áá)áá»ááșáá±áŹááșáá±ážááŒá±áŹááșážá áááșážá áźááá·áș áĄáá»áááșááŒááșáááŻáá»áŸááș áááŻáá·áșááŹážááŒááșááŒááșáĄááșáá»ááșáá»áŸááș á áá±áŹááșáž á á áá±áŹááșážáá±áŹááș áá±ážáá±á«ááșáá±ááŒá±áŹááșážá ááœá±áá±ážáááŻááșáá»áŸááș áá»ááșáá»ááșáž áááŻááșááČá·áĄá±áŹáșáá»áŸááș áááșážáĄááșáááŻááșááŒá±áŹááșážá áááșááŒáźážááá±áŹá· ááŹážáĄááșáá»áŸááș áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹááșážáá»áŸááș áááŻááșááŒáŹážáá«áááșááŒá±áŹááŒá±áŹááșážá áááșáááșá á.á.áá០ááá±áŹááșážááČ áĄáĄááșáááșáá¶ááá·áș áááșá០áá±áŹááșážáá±ááŒá±áŹááșážá http://www.shwemandalay.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=783:2011-09-30-03-59-49&catid=37:getaways&Itemid=154
nozomi
September 30, 2011 at 12:20 pm
weekly ááŸáŹ áá±áŹááșáááș áááșáááșááŹážááČá· ááááșážáá±ážáá«
ááŒá áșááŻá¶áááșáááșáá±áŹááșááŒááșážááᯠáááááááŻá· áĄá ááŻážááááșáááșááœááș áááșáááŻááșážááŹážáááșááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáááčááá ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· ááááșááœáŸáŹ áá±ážáááŻá·ááČá·ááŒá±áŹááșáž ááááșážáááŸááá«áááșá
áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáááčááááŒáźáž áŠážááááșážá áááșá á ááșáááșááŹá áá áááșáá±á·ááœááș ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· áĄáá»ááș (áá)áá»ááșáá«ááá·áș ááááșááœáŸáŹáá±ážáááŻá·ááČá·ááŒááșáž ááŒá áșáááșá
áĄáááŻáá«áĄáá»ááș áá áá»ááșááČááœááș ááŒá áșááŻá¶áááș áááșáá±áŹááșááŒááșážááᯠáááááááŻá·áĄá ááŻážááááșáááșááœááș áááșáááŻááșážááŹážáááșáááŻááá·áșáĄáá»ááș áá«áááșááŒá±áŹááșážá áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáááčáá áŠááááșážá áááșá០ááŒá áșááŻá¶áááșáááșáá±áŹááșááŒááșáž áááșáááŻááșážáááá·áșáĄáá±á«áș áááááááŻá·áĄá ááŻážááááș ááŒááșáá°ááźá០áááșážáááșááŹááá·áș áĄááœáá·áșáĄáŹááŹáĄá ááŹáááșáá°ááŻááșáá±áŹááșááŒááŒááșážááŒá áșá áĄáá»áŹážááŒááșáá° áááčááĄá ááŒá áșááŻá¶áááșáááșáá±áŹááșááŒááșážááᯠáááááááŻá· áĄá ááŻážááááșáááșááœááș áááșáááŻááșážááŹážáááșááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž áá±ážáááŻá·ááŹážááŒááșážááŒá áșáááșá
âáááááááŻá·áĄá ááŻážááááș ááŒááșáá°á០ááœá±ážáá»ááșáááșááŒáŸá±áŹááșááŹážááá·áș áĄá ááŻážáááŒá áșáááșááŸáá·áșáĄááź ááŒááșáá°áá»áŹážááááčáááᯠáĄáá±ážááŹážááá«áááșá ááŒááșáá°áá»áŹážá á ááŻážááááșáá°áááșááŸáŻáá»áŹážááᯠáĄáá±ážááŹážáááŒá±ááŸááșážáá±áŹááșááœááșáá±ážáááș ááŹáááșááŸááá«áááșá áááŻá·áá«á áááááááŻá· áĄá ááŻážááááșáááșááœááș ááŒá áșááŻá¶áááș áááșáá±áŹááșááŒááșážááᯠáááŒáŻááŻááșá á±ááČ áááșáááŻááșážááŹážáááș ááŒá áșáá«áááșá áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáĄááœááș áááŻáĄááșáá±ááá·áș áá»áŸááșá á áșááŹááșáĄáŹáž áááŸááá±ážáĄááœááș áĄááčáááŹááșáááŸááááŻááșááá·áș áĄááŒáŹážáá±áŹ áá±áĄáŹážáá»áŸááșá á áș á áźáá¶ááááșážáá»áŹážáááŻáᏠá áá áșááá» áá±á·ááŹáááșážá á áșá áá±áŹááșááœááșááœáŹážáááș ááŒá áșáá«áááșá áĄáááșááźážáá»ááșáž ááááșááœá±áááŻááșáᶠááŒá áșááá·áș áááŻááșááŒááșáá°á· áááčáááááŻááșáá¶ááŸáá·áș áá»áŻááșáááŻááŹážááá·áș áĄáááŻáá«á áźáá¶ááááșážááŸáá·áș áááșáááŻááșáá±áŹ á áŹáá»áŻááșá áŹáááșážáá»áŹážááᯠááááșáááșááá»ááșá á±ááČ ááá±áŹáá°ááŸááŻááŸááŻááșáž áá±áŹááșááœááșáááșááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· áĄáááá±ážáĄááŒá±áŹááșážááŒáŹáž áĄááșáá«áááș âáᯠáááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáááčáá áŠážááááșážá áááșá០ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· áá±ážáááŻá·áá±áŹ ááááșááœáŸáŹááœááș áá±á«áșááŒáá«ááŸááá«áááșá
nozomi
September 30, 2011 at 6:03 pm
áĄá ááŻážááá áșáááșáááșááœááș ááŒááșáá±áŹááșá áŻáááșááŒáźáž áŠážáĄá±áŹááșááŒááș ááŸáá·áș áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșáááŻá· áááááĄááŒáááșááŒá±áŹááșáĄááŒá áș á ááșáááșáᏠáááááșáá±á· ááœááșážááœáČáááŻááșážá ááœá·ááŻá¶ááČá·ááŒááŒáźáž ááœááșááŒáááșážáá»ááșážááŹááœáá·áș áĄáá«áĄáááș áĄááŒá±áŹááșážáĄááŹááŻá¶ážáááșáĄáŹáž ááœá±ážááœá±ážááČá·ááŒááŒá±áŹááșáž á áááșážáááŸááá«áááșá
ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŸáŻááᯠá ááșáááș ááŹá áááááșáá±á· ááœááșážááœáČ áááŹááźá០áááŹááź áááááá áșáĄáá»áááșáĄáá ááŒáŻááŻááș ááČá·ááŒááșážááŒá áșááŒáźáž ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŸáŻáĄááŒáźážááœááș ááááșážááŻááșááŒááșáá»ááșááᯠáŠážáĄá±áŹááșááŒááșá០ááŒá±ááŹááČá·áᏠááááșážáá±áŹááșáá»áŹážááŸáá·áșáááșáž ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááČá·áá«áááșá
ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŸáŻáĄááŒáźáž ááŻááșááŒááșááČá·áá±áŹ ááŒá±ááŹáá»ááșááᯠááŒááșáá±áŹááșá áŻáááșááŒáźáž áŠážáĄá±áŹááșááŒááșá áááșááŒáŹážááČá·ááŹá ”ááá±á·ááŒáŻááŻááșááá·áș ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŸáŻááœááș áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáááčááááŒáźážá ááœááșááŒáááșážáá»ááșážááŹááœáá·áșáá±ážáááș á ááșážá áŹážáá±áŹááșááœááșáá±ááá·áș ááá áčá á á§ááŹáááź ááŒá áșááŒá±áŹááșážááááșážááááșážáá±ážáĄááœááș ááŸá áșáááșáá°ážáá±á«ááșáž áá±áŹááșááœááșáááŻááșááá·áș áááșážáááșážáá»áŹážááá áčá á á„ááá±ááŒááșáááœááș áááșáááșáááŻááșáá±áŹááș ááá·áșáá»ááșáá±ááŒáá°áá»áŹážááᯠá„ááá±áá±áŹááșáĄááœááșáž ááŹáá±áŹááș ááŒáááșážáá»ááșážáá±áž áááșáá±áŹááșááŒáááș áááŻááșáá¶áá±áŹáșáĄá ááŻážáá ááŒááŻážáááșážáá±áŹááșááœááșáá±ááá·áșááá áčá áá»áŹážááŸáá·áș ááŒááșááœááșáž áááșááŒáááșáĄá±ážáá»ááșážáá±ážááŸáá·áș áááŹážá„ááá±á ááŻážáááŻážáá±ážáááŻá·áĄááœááș áá°ážáá±á«ááșáž áá±áŹááșááœááșáá±ážááá áčá áááŻá·ááᯠááœá±ážááœá±áž ááČá·ááŒáá«áááșá ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŸáŻáá»áŹážááᯠáááșáááșááŒáŻááŻááșááœáŹážáááș ááá±áŹáá°ááźááČá·ááŒáá«áááș”áá°á áá«ááŸáááČá·áá«áááșá
ds2
áááŻá·áá±áŹááș ááááșážáá±áŹááș áá»áŹážá áá±ážááœááșážáá±ážááŒááșážááČá·áᏠáááŻááș áᏠááááșážááŹáá០áŠážáĄá±áŹááșá០ááœááșážá ”ááœááșááČá·ááČá·áá áșáááșá áŠáž áááșáĄá±áŹááșááŒáá·áșá áááčáá±áŹááźážááŹáž ááŸáŹ ááŒá±áŹááœáŹážáá«áááșá áĄá áșááᏠáá«ááź áááșááČááᯠáááșááŹááČá·áááșáááș áááș áááșážááŒááŻáááŻáááșáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹááœáŹážáá« áááșááĄá áșááááșááŹáááŻá·áá»áá±áŹá·áá»áœááș áá±áŹáșáááŻá·ááááŹá technically á áááșážáááșáž áĄáááșáááŒá±ááŒá áș áá±áᏠááœá±á·ááá«áááșá áĄá ááŻážááááșá áĄáČ ááŹááᯠáááșáááŻá·áĄáááșááŒá±áĄá±áŹááș ááŻááș áá±ážáááŻááșááá·áșáĄáá±áĄááŹážááŸááá«áááŹážá áá«ááá±áŹá· áááșááŒáźážááᯠáá±ážááČá· áá±áž ááœááșážáá«á áá±áŹááșáá áșáááŻááșážááá±áŹá· áĄá áșááááŻáá±ážááČá·áá±ážááœááșážáá«á ááááș áááŻá· áĄá ááŻážááááșááᏠáááșážáááșáž áá«ážáá«áž ááŒáŻááŒááșáá±ážáááșáááŻáááș NLD ááᯠregistration ááŻááșááŒáźážáá±áŹá·áᏠááá·áș Byelection ááŸáŹáááșáááŻá·ááŸááá«áááŹážááĄá áșááááŻááșáááŻááș áááșáááŻá·áá±áŹááŸááșáž ááŹážááŹááŸááá«áááŹáž”áᯠáá±ážááŒááșážááČá· áá«áááșá
áááŻáá±ážááŒááșážáá»ááșááᯠáŠážáĄá±áŹááș ááŒááșá” áá»áœááșáá±áŹá·áșáĄáá±ááČá· áŠážá áœáŹááŒá±ááááșáááŻáááș á„ááá±ááČá·áĄááź áá»áœááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· ááŸááșááŻá¶áááșááŒáźážááœáŹážááČá·áĄáá»áááșááŸáŹ áá»áœááșáá±áŹáșáááŻá· NLD ááČá·áĄáá° áááșááœáČááŒáźážáá±áŹá· áá±áŹááșááœááșááœáŹážáááŻá·áĄááœááș áĄááŒáČáááșážááŒááŻáááŻáá»ááșááŸááá« áááșáááŻááČá·áĄááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒá±ááŒáŹážááᯠáá«áááș” áᯠááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááČá·áá«áááșá
áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșááá° ” NLD á áá±áŹá·á áá»áœááșáá NLD áĄááœááșá áĄáŹážááŻá¶ážáĄááœááș ááŒá±áŹáá±áž áááŻá·áááá°ážáá±á CEC ááᯠááááááș ááŒááŠážááŸáŹá CEC áááŻáááșááŒááŒáźážá០áá»áœááșááááŻá· áááșáááŻááŒá±áááČáááŻáᏠááŒá±áŹáá»ááșáá«áááșá áá»áœááșááááŻá·áááœá±áž áá±áŹááșááœáČáááŻáá°áĄá áá»áœááșááááŻá·ááá·áșáá»ááșáᏠáááŻááșáá«áá°ážá ááœá±ážáá±áŹááșááœáČáááŻáᏠááźáááŻááá±á áźá áá áșááČá· áá áááșáá áșáááŻááșáž ááŒá áșáááșáááŻáᏠáá»áœááșááááŻá· áááșáá¶ááŒáźážááŹážáá«áááźááᯠááœá±ážáá±áŹááșááœáČ áááșááŻá¶áááșáááșáž áĄááŒá±áĄáá± áĄáááșážáĄáá»ááșážáĄá áá«áááŻááČáá»áœááșááááŻá·ááŒáá·áșááŸáŹ ááŒá áșáá«áááș”áᯠááŒááșáááș ááŒá±ááŒáŹážááČá·áá«áááșá
áááŻá·áá±áŹááș áááșáá±ážááŸááșááœááșáž ááááșážá áŹá០áá±á«ááșááŹáá±áŹáșáááșážá á§ááŹáááźááŒá áșááŻá¶á áźáá¶ááááșážááᯠáááčááááŒáźáž áŠážááááșážá áááșá áá±ááčááááșááŹážáááŻááșááŒá±áŹááșáž ááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááČá·ááá·áșáĄáá±á«áș áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșá ááá±áŹááŹážáĄáŹáž áá±ážááŒááșážááČá·áᏠáá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșá ”áá»áœááșááááŻá· ááŹážáááș ááá±áŹááșá ááźááááșááá±ááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááœáŸááșáá±áŹáșááᯠáááčááááŒáźážááźá ááááșááœáŸáŹáááŻá·áááșáááŻá· ááŒá±áŹáá«áááșá ááźááááșááœáŸáŹááŸáŹáááŻáááș áááčááááŒáźážá ááŒááșáá°áá°ááŻááČá· á ááŻážááááșááŸáŻááœá±á ááŒá±áŹáá·áșááŒááŸáŻááœá±ááᯠáá±áŹááșááŹážááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááźááŒá áșááŻá¶áá±ááŹááŹá áźáá¶ááááșážááᯠáááșáááŻááșážááŹážáááșáááŻá· ááźáááŻááŸáŹááŒáŹáž áááŻááșáááșáááŻá· áá»áœááșááááŻá· ááŹážáááșáá«áááșá áá«ááá±áŹá· áá»áœááșááĄááŒááșááŸáŹáá±áŹá· ááŒááșáá°ááČá·áĄáá¶áááŻááŹážáá±áŹááșáááșáááŻáᏠáĄááșááááșá០áá±áŹááșážáá«áááșá ááźááŹááŹáĄá ááŻážááááŻááșáž ááŻááșáááá·áșááá áčá áá«á ááŒááșáá°ááČá·áĄáá¶ááᯠááŹážáá±áŹááșááááșá ááŒááșáá°ááČá· á ááŻážááááșááŒá±áŹáá·áșááŒááŸáŻááœá±ááᯠááááșááČ áá±ážáá±ážáááșáááș ááŹážááŒáźážáá±áŹá· ááŒá±ááŸááșážáá±ážááááșá áĄáČááŹááŒá±áŹáá·áș áá»áœááșááá«ááᯠááŒááŻáááŻáá«áááș”áᯠááŒááșáááș ááŒá±ááŒáŹážááČá·áá«áááșá
ááŒááșááœááșážááááșážáá»áŹáááșáá»áŹáž áááŻááșá áŹáž áá±ážááœááșážááᯠ24/7 áá»áŹáááșá០áŠážááźáá á±áŹá áá±ážááŒááșážááČá·áᏠ”áá±áŹáá±áŹáááș ááŒááșáá°ááœá±ááá±ááŒáźážáá±áŹá· áááá»ááșáá±ááŒá áá»á±áŹáșááá·áșááŒááŹááŸááááșá áĄááŻááŒá±áŹááșáž áá±ááČá· Political Process ááČááŸáŹ áĄááșááźá áŻáááŻá·ááČá· NLD á áááșáá±áŹááș áĄáá Inclusive ááŒá áșááŒáźááČá áááșáá±áŹááșáĄáá áááŹážáááșáááŒáźááČááá±áŹááșáá áșááŻááá±áŹá· áááŻááșáá¶áá±áž áĄáá»ááșážááŹážááœá±ááá áčá á áááŻááșáá¶áá±áž áĄáá»ááșážááŹážááœá±ááœááșáááŻá· áĄááŹážáĄáᏠáááșáá±áŹááșááŸáááŒáźááČá áá±áŹááșáá áșááŻááá±áŹá· Ethnic Issue ááœá±ááŸáŹ áááŻááșážáááșážááŹážááá áčá ááœá±ááŸáŹ áááșáá±áŹááșáĄáá ááŒáááșážáá»ááșážáá±ážááČá· ááŒá±ááČááŸáŻ áááŒáźááČá áĄáČááźááá áčá ááœá±ááŸáŹ áĄááșááźá áŻááČá· NLD á áááșáá±áŹááșáĄáá áá«áááșááœáá·áș ááá±ááŒáźááČá áĄáá»áááșáááșáááș ááŒá±áŹáááșáááŻáᏠáĄáČááźáĄáá»áááșáĄááœááș áĄáá»áááșáĄááá·áșáĄáááșáá áșáᯠáĄááșááźá áŻááŒá±áŹáááŻá·áááŒáźááŹáž”áᯠáá±ážááŒááșážááČá·áá« áááșá
áááŻáá±ážááŒááșážáá»ááșááᯠáá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááș áááșážá áŻááŒááșá០ááŒááșáááșááŒá±ááŒáŹážááČá·ááŹá ”ááŻáááŻááșážá áááșááŒáźážáŠážáĄá±áŹááșááŒááșáááșááœáŹážááČá· áĄááČááŸáŹáááșáž áá«ááŒáźážáá«ááŒáźá ááźááá áčá ááœá±ááᯠáá»áœááșááááŻá· ááœá±ážááœá±ážááŒáźáž ááŒá áșáá«áááșá áá»áœááșááááŻá·á áááșáá±áŹááșáĄáááŻááșážáĄáᏠáĄáááá«áááșáá±áááČáááŻááŹá áá»áœááșá áááŻá·á ááźááŹááœá±ááŸáŹááŒááșáá°ááœá±áĄááœááș áĄáá»ááŻážááŒá áșáááŻááșááČá· áĄáááŻááșážáĄááŹáĄáá áá»áœááșááááŻá· áá±áŹááșááœááșááœáŹážááŸáŹáá«á áááșáááŻááșááá±áŹááș ááŒááŻážá áŹážááŒáźážáá±áŹá·á០áááŻááșážááŒááșáĄááœááș áĄáá»ááŻážááŒá áșáááșá ááŒááșáá°ááœá±áĄááœááș áĄáá»ááŻážááŒá áșááá·áșááá áčá ááœá±ááŸáŹ áááŻáááŻá·ááŸááááș áá»áœááșááááŻá·á áĄááșáááŻááșáĄáŹážáááŻááș áá«áááșááŒáźáž ááŻááșááŸáŹááŒá áșáá«áááș”áᯠááŒá±áŹááŒáŹážááČá·áá«áááșá
áĄááŻááșáááŹážáááșááŒáźážááŹáááŸáá·áș áá°ááŸáŻáááșáááșážáááșáááșáá±ážááŸáá·áș ááŒááșáááșáá±ááŹáá»ááŹážáá±áž áááșááŒáźážááŹá ááŒááșáá±áŹááșá áŻáááșááŒáźáž áŠážáĄá±áŹááșááŒááșááŸáá·áș áá±á«áșáĄá±áŹááșáááșážá áŻááŒááșáááŻá·áááș ááááŒáááșááŒá±áŹááș ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááŹážááČá·ááŒáźáž áĄá ááŻážááá áșáááșáááș áááááĄááŒáááș ááœá±á·ááŻá¶ááČá·ááŒááșážááŒá áșáá«áááșá
etone
October 3, 2011 at 3:09 pm
October áĄááœááș áĄáá áșááŻááșáá«áá±áŹá· áá»ááŻá· … đ