Myanmar Morning News For March 8

Myanmar Morning News For March 8
Advertisement
Online English lessons

Welcome to the Myanmar morning news roundup by AEC News Today, your one stop for Myanmar news on matters of governance and policies affecting Asean business communities.

 

Myanmar morning news

K55 billion allocated for National Health Plan
Basic primary healthcare packages will be implemented in the National Health Plan (2017-2021) for township and primary-level hospitals such as those with 16 and 25 beds, said its director Dr Thant Sin Htoo.
— Myanmar Times

Ministers give details of spending on disaster management
Union-level officials explained to Parliament on March 6 how they spent the funds they took from Ks18.3 billion (US$13.4 million) budget earmarked for managing natural disasters.
— Eleven

H&M supply factory in Myanmar damaged in violent labour protest
Workers demanding better conditions and benefits have destroyed the production line of a Chinese-owned factory in Myanmar making clothes for Swedish fashion retailer Hennes & Mauritz, in one of the most violent labour disputes in the country in years.
— The Guardian

Ayeyawady region faces drinking water shortage amid drought
As drought-hit lakes dry up in Ayeyawady region, some villages in Tharbaung, Ngapudaw, Bogalay and Latputta townships are already facing a scarcity of drinking water, say local people.
— Eleven

MOEAF requests for lifting of worker ban to Malaysia
The Myanmar Overseas Employment Agencies Federation (MOEAF) has urged the Myanmar government to lift its temporary suspension on sending workers to Malaysia, according to MOEAF officials.
— Myanmar Times

Minimum wage to be raised within the year
Speaking at a conference on Saturday, Thein Swe, Union Minister of the Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population said that the government had plans to raise the minimum wage by the end of this year.
— Coconuts Yangon

PM seeks Jakarta help to send back Myanmar refugees
rime Minister Sheikh Hasina today requested the Indonesian government to play a role in sending back the Myanmar refugees from Bangladesh.
— The Daily Star

Over-invoicing found in development projects
The public accounts joint committee told the Parliament on March 6 through its report that developers’ proposed costs in government projects were higher than market prices.
— Eleven

Mandalay gets its first water park
In some strange twist of irony, Mandalay has received a surplus of water in the form of the city’s newest (and only) water park, just as Yangon citizens have pulled ourselves through six days of water shortage.
— Coconuts Yangon

Loss-making factories to be closed: Joint Bill Committee
The Joint Bill Committee has suggested that 44 loss-making state-owned factories should be closed.
— Eleven

134 mining blocks to expire this month
The Myanma Gems Enterprise under the Ministry of Resources and Environmental Conservation announced that a total of 134 authorised mining blocks in the country’s gemstone tracts are going to expire within this month.
— Myanmar Times

State counsellor says anti-corruption measures gathering speed
Myanmar’s fight against corruption is beginning to gather momentum, and graft is not that difficult to eradicate, State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi said during a business talk with women entrepreneurs held in Nay Pyi Taw yesterday.
— Eleven

Kayin State: Tigers, leopards and elephants spotted in Southeast Asia’s last great wilderness
Six camera trap surveys set up by the Karen Wildlife Conservation Initiative (KWCI) in the hill forests of Northern Karen State have identified at least 31 mammals, including tigers, leopards and Asian elephants in an area previously inaccessible to biologists and conservationists for security and political reasons.
— Coconuts Yangon

Government to return land to farmers
Dr Soe Than, regional minister for agriculture, livestock and irrigation, said: “We’re assessing the land. It shouldn’t take long. Within this year we will be able to give back the land to the owners.”
— Eleven

Women crucial for Myanmar’s development: State Counsellor
Many people, including women, have the impression that the fairer sex have equal rights in Myanmar, but in reality, they do not, said State Counsellor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
— Myanmar Times

MoE not responsible for religious content in textbooks
The Ministry of Education has responded to criticisms on social media that new civic education textbooks have included the four great religions – Buddhism, Islam, Christianity and Hinduism – by denying it is responsible for the curriculum.
— Myanmar Times

Health Minister attends Digital Health Conference in Myanmar
Minister of Health, Nutrition and Indigenous Medicine Dr. Rajitha Senarathna left for Myanmar yesterday (6th March) to attend the Asia-Pacific region digital health conference.
— The Official Government News Portal of Sri Lanka

 

 

Feature photo: Francisco Anzola

 

 

The Myanmar morning news roundup is published M-F by AEC News Today: Governance, not government; policies not politics.

 

 

 

The following two tabs change content below.

Stella-maris Ewudolu

Journalist at AEC News Today

Stella-maris graduated with a Bachelor of Arts, Education from Ebonyi State University, Nigeria in 2005.

Between November 2010 and February 2012 she was a staff writer at Daylight Online, Nigeria writing on health, fashion, and relationships. From 2010 – 2017 she worked as a freelance screen writer for ‘Nollywood’, Nigeria.

She joined AEC News Today in December 2016.

Support independent media by sharing using these tools. Do not steal our content

Make a comment

Your email address will not be published.