They will not be able to stand as candidates because officials accuse them of having foreign roots, news agency Al Jazeera reported
India's Ambassador to Thailand, Suchitra Durai, held a meeting with Unsit Sampuntharat, Governor of Tak province of Thailand in which Mae Sot is located
Suu Kyi was barred from becoming president by a clause in the constitution that was enacted under a previous military government
Book review of The Deer and the Dragon: Southeast Asia and China in the 21st Century
The leaders discussed the evolving Covid-19 scenario in the domestic and regional contexts and updated each other on the steps being taken to control the spread of the pandemic
Suu Kyi was an ardent critic of military rule during her decades-long Nobel Peace prize-winning nonviolent struggle for democracy
Military operations from August 2017 forced about 740,000 Rohingya to flee over the border into sprawling camps in Bangladesh
Xi and Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi signed 33 agreements shoring up key projects that are part of the flagship Belt and Road Initiative
Once regarded as an international rights icon for standing up to Myanmar's brutal junta, Suu Kyi's reputation has been tarnished by her decision to side with the military over the Rohingya crisis
The 74-year-old's international reputation has been tarnished by her silence over the plight of the Rohingya, and her defence of the same generals who once kept her under house arrest.
Heavy rains led to a major landslide at the Ma-lat mountain. People, houses and vehicles were caught in the mud discharge
Constitutional reform was a central pillar of the NLD's platform ahead of the 2015 general election, but little progress has been made as leaders have proved reluctant to confront the military
Two Reuters journalists, accused of breaching Myanmar's official secrets act during their reporting of the Rohingya crisis, have been sentenced to seven years each in jail by a Yangon court."Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, were originally detained in last December, after working on an investigation into the mass killing of a number of Rohingya villagers in Myanmar's Rakhine state," CNN reported.However, the accused journalists maintained that neither of them had done anything wrong.Shortly after the announcement of the verdict, Stephen Adler, Reuters Editor-in-Chief stated that the conviction was "a sad day" for the organisation, the two men (Wa and Kyaw) and "the press everywhere."Echoing similar sentiments, Human Rights Watch Deputy Asia Director Phil Robertson in a tweet called the conviction a hammer blow against media freedom in Myanmar."This conviction of the 2 Reuters reporters is a hammer blow against media freedom in #Myanmar, showing just how afraid the #Tatmadaw & ...
Contrary to conventional wisdom, India can afford to adopt a stricter approach, and it must
She will present a full report to the UN General Assembly in October on her visit to Myanmar
The tragedy may have occurred due to bad weather
In recent years, rise of radical nationalist movements has given the word a derogatory connotation
The quirky, crumbling complex of Bagan in Myanmar is a good approximation of heaven on earth
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi was also criticised for not taking initiatives to resolve the Rohingya crisis
India must follow up on its promises to Myanmar