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Today marks one year that Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo have been imprisoned in Myanmar. In September 2017 they exposed a massacre of Muslims by soldiers and civilians. They were set up and falsely arrested on December 12th 2017. More than 100 Myanmar activists observed the anniversary by releasing balloons at a rally in the country’s largest city Yangon. “The fact that they remain in prison for a crime they did not commit calls into question Myanmar’s commitment to democracy, freedom of expression and rule of law,” said Reuters editor-in-chief Stephen J. Adler. Read the story that prompted their arrest here. |
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Time's 'Person of Year' goes to journalists, including Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo. The publication also honoured slain Saudi Arabian writer Jamal Khashoggi, the founder of a Philippines news website critical of the country’s authoritarian government Maria Ressa and the staff of the Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland, where a gunman shot and killed five people in June. |
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Our jailed Reuters colleagues Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo have spent a year in jail for a crime they didn't commit. We cannot see them, but they are still with us. And we are still with them. Here's why. #FreeWaLoneKyawSoeOo 1:22 AM - 12 Dec 2018 |
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The UK Conservative Party has triggered a confidence vote in PM Theresa May's leadership. In order to remain leader of the party, she will need a majority vote of confidence from all Conservative MPs that place a ballot. The vote is due to happen between 1800 GMT and 2000 on Wednesday, Dec. 12. She has vowed to fight on, saying a change now would delay or even imperil Britain’s planned divorce from the European Union. |
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French police hunt Strasbourg Christmas market attacker. Security forces searched through eastern France on Wednesday for a man suspected of killing three people in an attack on a Christmas market in Strasbourg and who was known to have been religiously radicalized while in jail. |
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Commentary: Why is the EU still so determined to save the Iran nuclear deal? The answer lies in European fears of the security and economic consequences if the JCPOA collapses – and perhaps also in how Tehran might be able to pressure Europe to salvage the deal, writes columnist Maysam Behravesh. European powers seem to be less concerned about a nuclear Iran per se than what would happen if the United States or Israel and its Arab allies went to war to prevent that outcome. |
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