Intelligence Briefing

Ask a question. Get a source-grounded answer with citations.

moderate confidence 6 sources extractive

Based on 6 verified sources covering Myanmar:

DHAKA—Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s 15-year rule of the country ended on Monday as she fled weeks of deadly protests and the military announced it would form an interim government. (confirmed by 2 sources) [1]

Bengladesh Prime Minister Sheik Hasina delivers a speech at the WHO’s annual assembly attended by dozens of government ministers and more than 1,800 delegates, on May 17, 2011 at the United Nations office in Geneva. [2]

Protesters wave national flags as they stand over the Anti Terrorism Raju Memorial Sculpture during a protest in Dhaka on August 4, 2024, to demand justice for the victims arrested and killed in the recent nationwide violence during anti-quota protes... [3]

The National Unity Government (NUG) - The two soldiers, who had been conscripted by force in Ayeyarwady Region and sent to Bago Region, defected to Tharyarwaddy District P23801, along with weapons. [4]

AFP Bangladesh’s interim government, which took over after a mass uprising last year, warned on Saturday that unity was needed to “prevent the return of authoritarianism”. [5]

Sources
[1] MM www.irrawaddy.com · 2024-08-05 · 49% match

Bangladesh PM Hasina Flees Country, Military Takes Over

DHAKA—Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s 15-year rule of the country ended on Monday as she fled weeks of deadly protests and the military announced it would form an interim government.

[2] MM eng.mizzima.com · 2024-08-06 · 49% match

Bangladesh’s army chief says will ‘form an interim government’ after PM flees

Bengladesh Prime Minister Sheik Hasina delivers a speech at the WHO’s annual assembly attended by dozens of government ministers and more than 1,800 delegates, on May 17, 2011 at the United Nations office in Geneva.

[3] MM eng.mizzima.com · 2024-08-05 · 40% match

Bangladesh protests demand PM resign, army stands ‘by the people’

Protesters wave national flags as they stand over the Anti Terrorism Raju Memorial Sculpture during a protest in Dhaka on August 4, 2024, to demand justice for the victims arrested and killed in the recent nationwide violence during anti-quota protes

[4] MM eng.mizzima.com · 2025-05-24 · 39% match

Spring Revolution Daily News for 24 May 2025

The National Unity Government (NUG) - The two soldiers, who had been conscripted by force in Ayeyarwady Region and sent to Bago Region, defected to Tharyarwaddy District P23801, along with weapons.

[5] MM eng.mizzima.com · 2025-05-25 · 39% match

Bangladesh interim govt calls for unity to stop ‘return of authoritarianism’

AFP Bangladesh’s interim government, which took over after a mass uprising last year, warned on Saturday that unity was needed to “prevent the return of authoritarianism”.

[6] MM www.irrawaddy.com · 2024-08-07 · 39% match

Bangladesh Nobel Winner Yunus Tapped to Lead Interim Govt

DHAKA—Bangladesh’s Nobel-winning microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus has been tapped to lead an interim government after mass protests forced longtime prime minister Sheikh Hasina to flee, the presidency announced early Wednesday.

Ask another question →
How this works
The briefing engine uses semantic search (pgvector embeddings) to find the most relevant articles in the corpus for your question, then extracts key passages with numbered citations. No generative AI is used — all text comes directly from published sources.

Confidence levels
Strong — 5+ relevant sources with high similarity (>50%). The corpus has substantial coverage.
Moderate — 3-4 relevant sources or moderate similarity. Coverage exists but may be incomplete.
Weak — 1-2 sources or low similarity. Evidence is limited — verify independently.
Insufficient — No relevant articles found in the monitored corpus.

Limitations
Briefings reflect only what is in the monitored corpus (117,411 articles). Coverage varies by country and topic. Recent events may not yet be indexed. This is extractive synthesis, not analysis — it shows what sources say, not what to conclude.