The military’s loss of legitimacy and the emerging structures being built by the ethnic and Bamar resistance all point to one future: a federal Myanmar, says Khin Maung Win.
Predictions that this or that event marks a decisive moment in the country’s never-ending civil war miss the point: its power dynamics are far too elastic for that, says Tony Waters.
This changed after World War II, when President Harry Truman pushed to bring in approximately 400,000 displaced refugees from ...
Only the younger generation can learn from the history of the past.” This is the view of a 100-year-old Burma Star veteran ...
In the heart of modern-day Myanmar lies Old Bagan, home to thousands of ancient temples that once formed the center of the ...
Janaki Thevar’s story is a remarkable chapter of India’s freedom struggle. Born in British Malaya, she joined the INA at ...
Myanmar’s military is staging a political circus and calling it an election. The world knows it’s a fraud — yet some ...
For nearly two years, the American Cemetery in Margraten, The Netherlands ― solemn site of more than 8,300 graves of Americans who died freeing Europe from Nazi rule ― displayed ...
Six deaths have been reported following the earthquake till now. Among them, three people died when a rooftop railing ...
Nattukottai Chettiars’ business history is vividly detailed in "Fortune Seekers" by Raman Mahadevan, chronicling this Tamil ...