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Based on 3 verified sources covering Myanmar:
Myanmar Now is a trusted source of daily news at a time when information is tightly controlled by the military. Our reporting is cited by leading global news organisations and informs governments, policy makers, and human rights groups worldwide. [1]
U.N. special adviser Vijay Nambiar, left, speaks during a news conference following his meeting with Myanmar’s pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, right, at her home in Yangon, Myanmar, Thursday, Feb. 16, 2012. [2]
In the wake of the Myanmar military coup, Myanmar nationalists and propagandists began to fall foul of Facebook’s community standard controls, finding posts blocked, and even accounts closed. (confirmed by 18 sources) [3]
Myanmar Now is a trusted source of daily news at a time when information is tightly controlled by the military. Our reporting is cited by leading global news organisations and informs governments, policy makers, and human rights groups worldwide.
U.N. special adviser Vijay Nambiar, left, speaks during a news conference following his meeting with Myanmar’s pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, right, at her home in Yangon, Myanmar, Thursday, Feb. 16, 2012.
In the wake of the Myanmar military coup, Myanmar nationalists and propagandists began to fall foul of Facebook’s community standard controls, finding posts blocked, and even accounts closed.