Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Myanmar Times was founded by Ross Dunkley, an Australian, and Sonny Swe (Myat Swe) of Myanmar in 2000, making it the only Burmese newspaper to have foreign investment at the time. [2] The newspaper is privately owned by Myanmar Consolidated Media Co. Ltd. (MCM), which is 51 per cent locally owned and 49 per cent foreign owned.
Myanmar Business Today - Myanmar's first bilingual (English-Myanmar) business newspaper [14] Myanmar Digest [30] Myanmar Post - privately owned [31] Sunday Journal [32] The Myanmar Times, [33] a Burmese weekly news journal (daily newspaper in English) Premier Eleven Sports Journal [11] Popular News Journal [34]
In 1836, the country's first newspaper, The Maulmain Chronicle, was published [7] followed by The Rangoon Chronicle in 1853, [8] later renamed to The Rangoon Times. King Mindon was an advocate of press freedom and encouraged the creation of Burma's first Burmese-language newspaper, Yadanapon Naypyidaw Thadinsa (ရတနာပုံနေပြည်တော်သတင်းစာ) to report ...
In February 2011 Tin Tun Oo became CEO of The Myanmar Times, replacing editor Ross Dunkley, who had been arrested and imprisoned for violating the Myanmar Immigration Act. [1] He was also named editor-in-chief of the Myanmar-language edition, while Bill Clough of Far Eastern Consolidated Media became editor-in-chief of the English-language edition.
More recently, Cyclone Mora killed 194 people in 2017, after impacting Sri Lanka and Myanmar, according to the New York Times. Even in the wake of Mocha, heavy showers and thunderstorms will ...
According to a Financial Times article, The Irrawaddy initially received support from international donors like the National Endowment for Democracy and Open Society Foundations. Despite its critical role in reporting on Myanmar’s issues, the publication has faced scrutiny and accusations of bias.
While some people dread gift shopping, I thrive when it comes time to shop for the different people on my list. I love Christmas gift shopping, whether I’m trying to find a gift for my mother-in ...
Khit Thit Pyo May (Burmese: ခေတ်သစ်ပျိုမေ; lit. ' Girls in New Era ') is a popular Burmese live talk show broadcast on MRTV-4. [1] The talk show follows the conversations of beautiful and talented women. [2]