Kyaw Hsan Hlaing
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Latest About Me Research Engagement Spring Revolution Arakan Publishers
  • Los Angeles Times
  • Al Jazeera
  • TIME
  • Foreign Policy
  • The Globe and Mail
  • The Diplomat
  • ISEAS- Yusof Ishak Institute
  • United States Institute of Peace
  • Pulitzer Center
  • Stimson Center
  • Nikkei Asia Review
  • Frontier Myanmar
  • VICE
  • Columbia Journalism Review
  • South China Morning Post
  • The Nation
  • The Rest of world
  • The New Humanitarian
  • The Japan Times
  • The Mongabay
  • Tea Circle Oxford
  • Southeast Asia Globe
  • Foreign Correspondent HK
  • Myanmar Now
  • New Naratif
Columbia Journalism Review • March 8 2021

As protests grow in Myanmar, so do crackdowns on the press

From 1962 through 2011, a military junta ruled Myanmar. During that time, independent media reported in exile from neighboring countries or went undercover. The military imposed strict censorship, kept the price of sim cards prohibitively high, and isolated the southeast Asian country from the world.

When the democratically-elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi came to power in early 2016, it loosened some of its harshest restrictions on the press. But less than a year into its term, its relat
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Kyaw Hsan Hlaing kh827@cornell.edu wwww.kyawhsanhlaing.com