July 26 – August 1: The first of US$35.6 million in approved grants from the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria is expected to begin flowing into Myanmar in September under a process that will see a major expansion of healthcare resources.
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Thursday, July 28th, 2005
Thu 28 Jul 2005
Filed under: Inside Burma,News
Thu 28 Jul 2005
Filed under: Business / Trade,News
When it comes to the key regional cooperative frameworks to which Thailand belongs, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) and the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (Apec) immediately come to mind. Less familiar is the BIMST-EC, which brings together seven member countries: the original five members, Bangladesh, India, Burma, Sri Lanka and Thailand and Bhutan and Nepal, which joined the grouping more recently. On July 30-31, the leaders of BIMST-EC will meet in Bangkok for their first summit to provide political impetus to and to set the future direction for the cooperative initiatives under the grouping. It is therefore timely to take a look at how BIMST-EC came about and what it has achieved so far.
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Thu 28 Jul 2005
Filed under: News,Regional
Bangkok: Senior officials from China and five Southeast Asian nations
gathered in the Thai capital Wednesday to thrash out a new framework for fighting human trafficking in the region.
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Thu 28 Jul 2005
Filed under: News,Regional
Jakarta: Indonesia’s Foreign Affairs Minister Hassan Wirajuda said on Wednesday the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) in Hanoi, Vietnam will be held in October as scheduled, despite the Myanmar issue. “My impression is that the ASEM will be held in October as scheduled. I believe that ASEM participants, both from Asia and Europe, are aware of the importance of dialogs through ASEM and will not rule out ASEM merely because of the Myanmar issue,” he said.
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India and Burma yesterday signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) under which New Delhi will make available a Line of Credit (LoC) of 56.358 million US dollars (Rs 265 crore) for strengthening rail system in the neighbouring country.
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Thu 28 Jul 2005
Filed under: International,News
About 80 pro-democracy activists held a noisy demonstration outside the Oriental City shopping centre in Colindale to protest against an exhibition promoting the country of Myanmar, formerly known as Burma.
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Thu 28 Jul 2005
Filed under: International,News
The Hmong aren’t the only refugees from Thailand who are showing up to register for classes in St. Paul public schools.
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Thu 28 Jul 2005
Filed under: News,Opinion
The long saga of failed sanction regimes against Cuba, Haiti and Iraq – where sanctions gravely worsened an already bad situation – should give pause to the US and European political establishments. The US Congress recently voted overwhelmingly for a one-year extension to economic sanctions against Myanmar (Burma). In this context, sanctions are mainly a symbolic stand for justice. But they are not symbolic in their effects. They are economically destructive and only occasionally politically productive.
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Thu 28 Jul 2005
Filed under: News,Press Release
July 27: 1) The American Museum of Natural History (which is located in Central Park, New York) has planned an expensive trip to Burma from October 10-26th, 2004. This is in direct defiance of Burma’s democracy movement led by 1991 Nobel Peace Prize recipient Aung San Suu Kyi, whom has called for a boycott of all travel to Burma. (more…)