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For almost two decades in Myanmar s notorious Insein Prison, Win Tin wore the blue shirt issued to all inmates. He kept it after his release in 2008 out of solidarity with other political prisoners who remained in jail. Now the police want it back, but Win Tin is refusing. So long as there are political prisoners here, I feel that I myself am still in jail, so I will wear the blue shirt, he told Reuters, wearing a copy of the original. Win Tin, 83, was imprisoned after helping found the National League for Democracy NLD wi [url=https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz]stanley cup[/url] th Aung San Suu Kyi, who led the fight against military rule in Myanmar and spent 15 years under house arrest. She and other NLD members now sit in parliament. The current president, Thein Sein, was a general and a member of the junta, but he heads a quasi-civilian government that has embarked on a series of reforms over the past two years, including the release of hundreds of political prisoners. Not good enough, says Win Tin, a celebrated journalist. Although I m said to be f [url=https://www.cups-stanley.es]stanley cup[/url] ree, I am still a prisoner, because the whole country is prisoner to this military regime, he said, arguing the 2008 constitution should be rewritten to exclude the military from politics. The constitution gives a quarter of the seats in both houses of parliament to the military and says serving generals should occupy the ministries of defence, interior and border affairs. Suu Kyi has agreed to work with Thein [url=https://www.stanley-cups.com.mx]stanley cup[/url] Sein, praised the military - the modern Myanmar army was Ppht Pakistan reveals soft side to India with trade show
Abdel Aziz al-Hakim, the leader of Iraq s largest Shiite party who died on Wednesday, will be remembered as a key ally of Iran who also built a dialogue with Tehran s arch-foe, the United States. HT Image His death comes as his Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council SIIC movement faces a battle to retain its place at the centre of power in a general election planned for January, having already been routed in provincial polls seven months ago. Labelled by some as Tehran s agent in Iraq due to his 20-year exile in Iran, he returned to his homeland in the wake of the US-led invasion in 2003, which toppled Saddam Hussein but set in motion a cataclysmic sectarian insurgency. A notorious chain-smoker, w [url=https://www.nike-dunks.de]nike dunk[/url] hose habit ultimately led to his death from lung cancer, he always appeared in public in black robes and wearing the turban of a descendant of the Muslim Prophet Mohammed. Af [url=https://www.cup-stanley.uk]stanley cup[/url] ter Saddam s overthrow and 80 years of Sunni domination, he admitted in an interview with AFP in 2005 that he had given up hope of an Iraqi state led by Shiite clerics, and instead began to reach out to the country s vast mix of religious and ethnic groups, including Sunnis, Kurds, Turkmen and Christians. We are not seeking to establish a Shiite state in Iraq ... but to have a government that makes its priority to restore the people s opinion, to have elections and to have a kind of governme [url=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.co.uk]stanley cups[/url] nt that all should participate in, he said just days after the country s first post-invasion elections. The suitable