7 May 2019

two reuters journalists freed in myanmar both are pulitzer award winners


Two Reuters journalists held in Myanmar for more than 500 days for their coverage of the crackdown on Rohingya Muslims were freed from jail Tuesday, ending a prolonged detention that has tainted Myanmar and its Nobel laureate civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi. Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo both were Pulitzer award winners released as part of an annual amnesty has freed thousands of prisoners since last month. An additional 6,000 people were released Tuesday.Their release was immediately and widely celebrated across the world. Reuters editor in chief Stephen J. Adler said in a statement that the news agency is `enormously pleased` that the two have been freed.`Since their arrests 511 days ago, they have become symbols of the importance of press freedom around the world. We welcome their return,`Myanmar officials have no immediate reason for the release of the two journalists, who had exhausted all their legal options after Myanmar’s highest court rejected their appeal late last month.Suu Kyi — winner of the Nobel Peace Prize — has also been under significant pressure from Vice President Pence and others to intervene in the case and free the journalists. But she had defended their detention and said they were not jailed for their reporting but because they were convicted of breaking colonial-era state secrecy laws.
The two journalists were accused of possessing secret documents but were widely believed to have been set up in December 2017. In September they were convicted and sentenced to seven years in prison. The two journalists were lured into a meeting with police officers who handed over rolled-up documents. The pair were arrested shortly afterward by other officers.
The journalists and their lawyers have insisted that they were merely doing their job as reporters, never had the chance to read the documents before they were detained and had not been planning to share state secrets. The pair have received multiple honors and awards for their investigation into a massacre of 10 Rohingya Muslims, the story they were working on at the time of their arrest. These include the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting, which they won in April.Tuesday walking out of the gates of Yangon’s Insein prison, smiling and carrying a single bag each with their few possessions. They were mobbed by photographers and onlookers upon their exit.`I’m really happy and excited to see my family and my colleagues,` Wa Lone said in brief comments upon his release, thanking everyone around the world who helped secure his freedom. `I can’t wait to go to my newsroom.`The 33-year-old is a father of a baby girl who was born while he was jailed. Kyaw Soe Oo, 29, also has a young daughter. Their wives had repeatedly appealed to the Myanmar government to pardon their husbands.

6 May 2019

dhoni casts his vote in ranchi along with her wife and daughter



The election fever is on as the country votes in the ongoing fifth phase of Lok Sabha elections 2019. On Monday, former Indian captain and Chennai Super Kings (CSK) skipper MS Dhoni cast his vote in his hometown Ranchi, Jharkhand. Dhoni and Sakshi were pictured at a polling booth in Jawahar Vidya Mandir in the state capital, along with their four year old daughter Ziva. Dhoni is currently busy with the Indian Premier League (IPL) tournament in which he heads team Chennai. Polling is being held in four Lok Sabha constituencies in Jharkhand Hazaribagh, Koderma, Ranchi and Khunti (ST). Sixty one candidates, including Union Minister Jayant Sinha, former chief ministers Arjun Munda and Babulal Marandi, former union minister Subodh Kant Sahay and ex-MLA Kalicharan Munda, are in the fray in this phase. Apart from Jharkhand, polling is also beig held in other six states  Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir and Rajasthan.

5 May 2019

Narendra Modi’s rule was the most traumatic says Manmohan Singh




Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Sunday said Narendra Modi’s rule was the most `traumatic` for India’s youth, farmers and traders.`PM Narendra Modi`s rule was the most traumatic and devastating for India’s youth farmers, traders and every democratic institution. Summing up the five-year tenure of the NDA regime as a sad story of governance and accountability failure. Singh further asserted that while the UPA government was open to scrutiny, PM Modi considered his government inscrutable and unaccountable to the litany of corruption charges. `Government that doesn’t believe in inclusive growth, worries about political existence at the altar of disharmony should be shown exit door,` he said with the press.The former PM, who has in the recent past spoken out aggressively against the policies of the BJP government, also assailed PM Modi over his `slipshod policy` on Pakistan.Modi’s slipshod policy on Pakistan was marred by a series of flip-flops  from going to Pakistan uninvited to inviting rogue ISI to Pathankot,` he said.`Government that doesn’t believe in inclusive growth, worries about political existence at the altar of disharmony should be shown exit door,` he said.With the saffron party making nationalism its main poll narrative in the ongoing Lok Sabha elections, Singh said, `BJP searching for new narratives every day. This reflects bankruptcy of national security vision.

4 May 2019

cyclone fani kills at least 12 in india before swiping bangladesh


cyclone fani kills at least 12 in india before swiping Cyclone Fani, one of the biggest to hit India in years, barrelled into Bangladesh on Saturday (May 4) after leaving a trail of deadly destruction in India. Having hit land, tropical cyclone Fani had lost some of its power and was downgraded to a ‘Deep Depression’ by the Indian Meteorological Department. Indian media reported that at least 12 people had died across the state, with most deaths caused by falling trees, but a mass evacuation of 1.2 million people in the 24 hours before the tropical cyclone made landfall averted a greater loss of life.The seaside temple town of Puri, which lay directly in the path of Fani, suffered extensive damage, as winds gusting up to 200 kph (124 mph) tore off tin roofs, snapped power lines, and uprooted trees on Friday. Neighbouring West Bengal escaped substantial damage, but authorities moved nearly 45,000 people to safer locations.The cyclone season in the Bay of Bengal can last from April to December.In 1999, a super-cyclone battered the coast of Odisha for 30 hours, killing 10,000 people. About 1.2 million people living in the most vulnerable districts in Bangladesh had been moved to some 4,000 shelters. The storm destroyed several houses in the Noakhali district, where a two-year-old child was killed and about 30 people were injured, local official Tanmoy Das told reporters.


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