What's Happening in Myanmar
This week on Season 2, Episode 4 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, Suu Kyi was reportedly moved to house arrest amid scepticism, while fighting intensified as the military retook key towns. International legal action and ASEAN diplomacy continued amid growing scrutiny of the crisis. Please click the link to join us, in the podcast show notes Timecodes— (00:16) Intro (00:35) ASSK moved to house arrest (02:15) Regime increases battlefield gains (03:39) International lobbying and accountability (05:35) ASEAN summit grapples with crisis (06:31) Close
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This week on Season 2, Episode 3 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, the junta says Aung San Suu Kyi ‘moved to house arrest’, claims battlefield victories, and secures China's backing while cracking down on journalists. Resistance groups, meanwhile, are fractured by internal conflict and exhaustion. Please click the link to join us, in the podcast show notes Timecodes— (00:05) Intro (00:17) Aung San Suu Kyi ‘moved to house arrest’ (00:59) Regime victories and fractured alliances (02:03) China's endorsement and the Myitsone dam (03:38) Press crackdown (05:02) Crisis at...
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This week on Season 2, Episode 2 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, the junta grants a New Year amnesty but kept key leaders under surveillance. Airstrikes killed civilians during the holiday, while peace talks were rejected. The opposition and observers of the crisis see these moves by the ‘new’ government as little more than tactical. Please click the link to join us, in the podcast show notes Timecodes— (00:22) Amnesty, airstrikes, and resistance (00:48) Selective releases, continued repression (02:55) Holiday airstrikes and civilian casualties (04:05) TNLA political fallout...
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This week on Season 2, Episode 1 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, junta chief Min Aung Hlaing becomes president to no one’s surprise, drawing global condemnation while allies like China and Russia offered congratulations. Activists file a genocide case in Indonesia and a class action suit against Telenor. Amid a severe fuel crisis, the junta forms a new cabinet, while fears of new cyber scam hubs emerge. Please click the link to join us, in the podcast show notes Timecodes— (00:00) Opening (0:19) The ‘new’ government (3:53) Rohingya legal case (4:36) Deepening fuel crisis...
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This fortnight on episode 67 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, Min Aung Hlaing takes the presidency, a fuel crisis hits the petrol pumps in reaction to the widening war in the Middle East, forced conscription, a new council for federal democracy is launched and we look at the plight of the Rohingya. Please click the link to join us, in the podcast show notes Timecodes— (00:00) Opening (1:42) Election of MAH as president (2:53) The fuel crisis (6:19) Six groups launch council for federal democracy push (7:09)Forced conscription into resistance forces (7:37)Plight of Rohingya...
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With Nic Dunlop, features editor at Frontier Myanmar. Today on episode 66 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, coup leader Min Aung Hlaing is expected to be elected president later this month as both houses of parliament convene following the military’s so-called election, the Three Brotherhood Alliance fractures as the MNDAA attacks the TNLA in Kutkai and takes control of a key trade route to China, and we discuss the future of the podcast. Email the show at Our guests— , features editor at Frontier Myanmar New original content on the Frontier website:
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With Helene Maria Kyed and Justine Chambers, both social anthropologists and senior researchers at the Danish Institute for International Studies, and Ah Lynn, researcher from northwest Myanmar. This fortnight on episode 65 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, parliament is set to convene as rumours persist about potential appointments, including Min Aung Hlaing taking the presidency, a fuel crisis hits the petrol pumps in reaction to the widening war in the Middle East, and we discuss the climate change-conflict nexus and how people are experiencing climate change in Myanmar. Email the show at ...
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With Jason Tower, senior expert, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime. This fortnight on episode 64 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, the military publishes full results for its pre-determined election, military appointees are assigned to parliament, the USDP negotiates with the regime on the make-up of government, and we discuss intra-resistance infighting and the China-scam dynamic in regime politics. Email the show at Timecodes— (00:00) Opening (02:22) Election results and appointees (05:03) With Jason Tower, the Chinese New Year statements (18:26) The scam...
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With Amara Thiha, non-resident fellow with the China Program at the Stimson Center. This fortnight on episode 63 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, the military’s election conclude to China’s approval, with coup leader Min Aung Hlaing enacting a new law to extend the military’s oversight of the soon-to-be-formed, military-designed civilian administration. Email the show at Timecodes— (00:00) Opening (02:05) Conflict and civilian attacks over election period (03:40) With Seng, the ongoing case at the ICJ (03:54) Military elections conclude (04:48) The new Union Advisory Council Law...
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We identified and corrected a factual error in this episode. With Seng, human rights advocate from Myanmar. This week on episode 62 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, the military’s Union Election Commission reduces the areas where voting will occur in the final phase of its so-called election on January 25, and we discuss the background and ongoing arguments of the Gambia’s long-delayed case at the International Court of Justice, where it accuses Myanmar of breaking the UN Genocide Convention for its atrocities against the Rohingya people. Email the show at Timecodes— (00:00) Opening ...
info_outlineWith Dustin Barter and Stella Naw, two co-authors of a new ODI report on humanitarianism and revolutionary state-building in Myanmar. This week on episode 46 of What’s Happening in Myanmar, the resistance takes Banmauk, a Kachin Independence Army camp is hit with a precision airstrike, rights organisations react to Sweden ceasing development aid, and we discuss why international donors and humanitarian actors should engage with the new “pluralistic state” of Myanmar.
Email the show at whimyanmar@proton.me
Timecodes—
01m19s :: News roundup
02m41s :: With Stella Naw & Dustin Barter, an aid rethink
16m21s :: The pluralistic state
25m54s :: Risk aversion and risk taking for aid
33m17s :: Recommendations for resistance
40m56s :: Close
Our guests—
Dustin Barter, Senior Research Fellow in the Humanitarian Policy Group at ODI Global
Stella Naw, academic activist working on Indigenous and decolonial peacebuilding and governance practices
And the reports under discussion:
Making Myanmar: humanitarianism amid revolutionary state-building
Sweden ends development aid to Myanmar, abandoning media and civil society
Plus, new original content on the Frontier website:
Viral justice: Social media and the court of public opinion
The perils of abortion for Myanmar women
Seeking solidarity for Myanmar in a cruel world