Dozens of officers have been reassigned to key ministries, extending a decades-old practice that critics say weakens civilian ...
Thai PM Anutin congratulates coup leader, ‘stands ready to support Myanmar’s effort toward peace, stability and national ...
SDG Group’s aid, education and labor initiatives may be paving the way for a $900-million oil venture that could supply ...
Regime spokesperson Maj-Gen Zaw Min Tun is the latest high-ranking official to be purged after a tip-off from Beijing.
Since September last year, the regime has been pushing south of Myawaddy to recapture lost territory with air and artillery support, triggering fierce clashes with Karen resistance groups and ...
Min Aung Hlaing has doffed his uniform to appoint himself president, but a change of clothes cannot mask the unprecedented chaos and collapse of his reign.
Marauding regime troops kill, burn and rape their way through resistance-held areas of Sagaing, Magwe and Mandalay—and the victims are nearly always civilians.
The junta boss-turned-president-elect nominated 30 ministers across 31 ministries, many of whom have been sanctioned for rights abuses.
Rohingya representatives and rights groups seek to hold Min Aung Hlaing accountable under Indonesia’s universal jurisdiction laws.
With political stability secured after recent elections, the Anutin government now faces mounting economic pressures and must prove it can deliver.
The regime has ramped up its bombing campaign since parliament opened last month, targeting schools, monasteries and clinics in resistance-held areas.
Regime reopens Myawaddy-Kawkareik section after two-year closure but continues to block formal imports while shutting off alternative trade routes for Thai goods.
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