အီဂျစ်နိုင်ငံမှာ ဆန်ဒပြ လူထုအုံကြွမှု ထပ်မံဖြစ်ပွါးရာတွင်ရိုက်ချက်ဓာတ်ပုံများ PHOTOS

KyaemonNovember 24, 20116min1555


ပါလီမန်လွှတ်တော် အမတ်ရွေးကောက်ပွဲကိုနောက်တပတ်မှာကျင်းပမယ်ဖြစ်သော်လည်း သမတရွေးကောက်ပွဲကိုကြတော့၂၀၁၂ နှစ်ကုန်ဘဲ ဖြစ်ဖြစ်၂၀၁၃ ထိတောင်ဘဲဖြစ်ဖြစ် ဆိုင်းငံ့ဘို့စစ်အာဏာပိုင်ကအဆိုပြူတာကို ဒေါသထွက်၊

စစ်သားတွေ အစိုးရအစိတ်အပိုင်းထဲဝင်ကာ နေရာယူအုပ်ချုပ်နေတာ ကို လုံးဝ မကျေနပ်ကြ အားမလိုအားမရဖြစ်နေကြတယ်

Egypt erupts with fresh protests – The Big Picture – Boston.com

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2011/11/egypt_erupts_with_fresh_protes.html

  

Egypt erupts with fresh protests

Protesters unhappy with the pace of change and the continued military rule in Egypt flooded Cairo’s Tahrir Square over the weekend demanding civilian rule. Riot police responded with tear gas, beatings, and live ammunition, leaving at least 20 dead in continuing clashes. Egypt holds parliamentary elections next week, and demonstrators want presidential elections to be held shortly afterward. The ruling military has proposed to delay those elections until late 2012 or even 2013, angering Egyptians frustrated with the military’s role in government. Collected here are images of the struggle over the weekend. — Lane Turner (24 photos total)

မျက်စိကိုနို့ရည်နဲ့လောင်းတာကမျက်ရည်ယိုဗုံးငွေ့ကိုကာကွယ်နိုင်တယ်လို့ယုံကြည်

5 comments

  • koyinmaung

    November 24, 2011 at 6:19 pm

    အားရစရာဓါတ်ပုံတွေပါလား…..
    ကမာ္ဘပါ်မှာအာဏာရှင်နိုင်ငံတွေ
    ကျဆုံးမှု့ကတောအံမခန်းပါလား….
    လာပြန်ပြီနောက်တနိုင်ငံ…

  • windtalker

    November 24, 2011 at 6:50 pm

    ဒုတိယ ပုံ ထဲ မှာ
    ဆာရီတစ်ကိုယ်လုံး ခြုံထားတဲ့ နင်ဂျာမ က
    ရဲ ကို သစ်ကိုင်းနဲ ့ရိုက်မလို ့..ထင်တယ်နော

  • Kyaemon

    November 24, 2011 at 10:27 pm

    သစ်ကိုင်းနဲ ့ရိုက်မလို ့ဘဲ၊ သတ်တိရှိ ကြတယ်လို့ပြောရမယ် ထင်တယ်

    ———

    “ဆာရီတစ်ကိုယ်လုံး ခြုံထား”

    “ဆာရီ” လို့ ခေါ်မယ် မထင်ပါ၊အနောက်နိုင်ငံက Burkha/Burqa “ဘာကာ” လို့သတင်းမှာရေးတာများ၊

    “ဆာရီ” က အိန်ဒိယ နဲ့ပါကစ်စတန်အမျိုးသမီး တွေဝတ်တာ ကပုံစံချင်းမတူ

    မပိုင်လို့ ဝီကီအဘိဓာန်က ပုံများကိုညွှန်းမှဘဲဖြစ်မှာ

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sari

    A sari or saree[note 1] is a strip of unstitched cloth, worn by females, ranging from four to nine metres in length that is draped over the body in various styles.[1] It is popular in India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Burma, and Malaysia. The most common style is for the sari to be wrapped around the waist, with one end then draped over the shoulder baring the midriff.[1]

    The sari is usually worn over a petticoat (लहंगा lahaṅgā or “lehenga” in the north, langa/pavada/pavadai in the south, chaniyo, parkar in the west, and shaya in eastern India), with a blouse known as a choli or ravika forming the upper garment. The choli has short sleeves and a low neck and is usually cropped, and as such is particularly well-suited for wear in the sultry South Asian summers. Cholis may be backless or of a halter neck style. These are usually more dressy with plenty of embellishments such as mirrors or embroidery, and may be worn on special occasions. Women in the armed forces, when wearing a sari uniform, don a short-sleeved shirt tucked in at the waist. The sari developed as a garment of its own in both South and North India at around the same time, and is in popular culture an epitome of Indian culture.[2]

    Jilbāb – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jilbāb

    The term jilbāb or jilbaab (Arabic جلباب) is the plural of the word jilaabah which refers to any long and loose-fit coat or garment worn by some Muslim women. They believe that this definition of jilbab fulfills the Quranic demand for a Hijab. Jilbab or Jilaabah is also known as Jubbah or Manteau (which is the French word for coat or mantle).
    The modern jilbāb covers the entire body, except for hands, face, and head. The head and neck are then covered by a scarf or wrap (khimar). Some women will also cover the hands and face (niqab).
    In Indonesia, the word jilbab is used for a headscarf rather than a long baggy overgarment (Geertz). In recent years, a short visor is often included to protect the face from the tropical sun.

    Traditional Islamic costume for women seems to have included the abaya, the chador, and the burqa, as well as many other forms of dress and head covering.

    Abaya – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abaya

    The abaya “cloak” (Arabic: عباية‎ ʿabāyah or عباءة ʿabā’ah, plural عبائات /عبايات ʿabāyāt), sometimes also called an aba, is a simple, loose over-garment, essentially a robe-like dress, worn by some women in parts of the Islamic world including in Turkey, North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula.[1] Traditional abayat are black and may be either a large square of fabric draped from the shoulders or head or a long caftan. The abaya covers the whole body except the face, feet, and hands. It can be worn with the niqāb, a face veil covering all but the eyes. Some women choose to wear long black gloves, so their hands are covered as well.
    The Indonesian and Malaysian women’s kebaya, gets its name from the abaya.

    Chador – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chador

    A chādor or chādar (Persian: چادر‎) is an outer garment or open cloak worn by many Iranian women and female teenagers in public spaces. Wearing this garment is one possible way in which a Muslim woman can follow the Islamic dress code known as ḥijāb. A chador is a full-body-length semicircle of fabric that is split open down the front, with a head-hole in the top. This cloth is tossed over the woman’s or girl’s head, but then she holds it closed in the front. The chador has no hand openings, or any buttons, clasps, et cetera, but rather it is held closed by her hands or by wrapping the ends snugly around her waist.

    Burqa – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burqa

    A burqa (Arabic pronunciation: [ˈbʊrqɑʕ]; also transliterated burkha, burka or burqua from Arabic: برقع‎ burqu’ or burqa’ ) is an enveloping outer garment worn by women in some Islamic religion to cover their bodies in public places. The burqa is usually understood to be the woman’s loose body-covering (Arabic: jilbāb), plus the head-covering (Arabic: ḥijāb, taking the most usual meaning), plus[citation needed] the face-veil (Arabic: niqāb).

  • Kyaemon

    November 28, 2011 at 2:05 am

    အီဂျစ်နိုင်ငံက လက်ရှိ နိုင်ငံရေးအခက်အခဲအရှုပ်အရှင်းကို ကျော်လွှားနိုင်ဘို့ မိမိအား ယာယီအစိုးရရဲ့ဝန်ကြီးချုပ်အဖြစ်ခန့်ရင် မိမိက သမတ ရွေးချယ်ခံဘို့ အခွင့်အလမ်း ကိုစွန့်လွှတ်မယ်(အနစ်နာခံမယ်) လို့ ဒီမိုကရေစီ ခေါင်းဆောင် El Baradei အယ်ဘာရာဒိုင် ကပြော

    Egypt: ElBaradei Says He Would Abandon Presidency Bid To Lead Interim Government | World News | Sky News
    http://news.sky.com/home/world-news/article/16118502

    Leading Egyptian democracy advocate Mohamed ElBaradei has said he is willing to drop his presidential bid and become interim prime minister to steer the country out of its political crisis.

    The former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency has offered to head a “national salvation” government, ahead of a huge protest planned in Cairo’s Tahrir Square.

    Demonstrators, who have been converging on the square in large numbers for the past nine days, are demanding the country’s military rulers step down.

    It comes a day before the start of voting in the first parliamentary elections since the February uprising that forced out president Hosni Mubarak….

    Mr ElBaradei’s office said earlier he had been in touch with the military council to discuss “the demands of the revolution”, without reaching agreement. He also met with political groups.
    The two days of voting due to begin on Monday represent the first stage of a complex, drawn-out election to parliament’s lower house that will be completed in January.
    Voting for the upper house and the presidency will follow before the end of June.
    Alarmed by the violence in Cairo and other cities, the US and the European Union have urged a swift handover to civilian rule in a country where prolonged political turmoil has compounded economic woes.

  • Zippo

    November 28, 2011 at 2:32 am

    ဘာမှ ပြောစရာမရှိပါ၊ ဓါတ်ပုံကြီးတွေက ကြည်လင်တောက်ပနေတာပဲ ပြောစရာရှိတယ်။
    သူတို့ရဲ့ စိတ်ဓါတ်တွေက အံ့မခန်း ကြောက်စရာတွေ ။

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