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For most world leaders, tariff letters from US President Donald Trump mean a big headache. But for one Southeast Asian ...
Did the Trump administration lift sanctions on Myanmar after its military leader sent the president a nice letter? Consider a ...
Nevertheless, millions in Myanmar tuned in religiously to the Burmese-language services of VOA, RFA, the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), BBC, and All India Radio (AIR).
YANGON: Myanmar's military leader lauded Donald Trump and asked him to lift sanctions, the junta said Friday after a tariff letter from the US president believed to be Washington's first public ...
Radio Free Asia is laying off about 90 percent of its staff. It says it can no longer pay people after its funding was cut off by the Trump administration.
A rebel army spokesperson in conflict-torn Myanmar has accused the military junta of war crimes after it conducted an airstrike on a church next to a civilian camp for displaced people killing nine of ...
Today, RFA broadcasts in 10 languages, reaching listeners not just in China, but also in places like Myanmar, Vietnam, and North Korea where press freedom is nonexistent or severely threatened.
About 75% of Radio Free Asia staff were placed on leave Friday, the result of funding cuts ordered by Kari Lake, senior adviser to the U.S. Agency for Global Media.
Deserters from the Myanmar junta’s front-line forces have accused senior officers of ordering them to loot and torch civilian homes and kill cattle for food, says a report. Pyae Sone, who deserted ...
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