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The military retains huge political and economic influence in Myanmar<br><br>[https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html myanmar best beaches]'s military on Wednesday sued two local journalists using a controversial censorship law over an article they wrote criticising the top brass as fears grow over curbs on press freedom.<br><br>The military retains huge political and [http://Topofblogs.com/tag/economic%20influence economic influence] in [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html best beaches myanmar] and has a long track record of pursuing critics, both during the crippling decades of junta rule and since the generals partially ceded power to civilians.<br><br>The latest story to anger the military, published in The Voice newspaper in late March, took aim at a propaganda film called "Pyi Daung Su Thit Sar" ([http://www.Wired.com/search?query=Faithful Faithful] to the Union) lauding the army's victories over armed ethnic groups.<br><br>The article took aim at senior leaders for sitting around holding peace talks and drinking wine while low-rank soldiers are being killed.<br><br>Kyaw Swa Naing, who wrote the story under a pen name, said he would report to the police on Thursday over the case brought under the country's increasingly used and [http://www.reddit.com/r/howto/search?q=broadly%20worded broadly worded] telecommunications law which forbids "defaming or disturbing" people online.<br><br>"I am determined myself that I won't apologise to them for my article," Kyaw Swa Naing, who is being sued along with the paper's editor, told AFP.<br><br>"There is fighting everywhere and its normally lower-rank soldiers who end up dead while the leaders sit behind their desks."<br><br>Myint Kyaw from the Myanmar Press Council, a media arbitration panel, said the military viewed the article as creating "divisions" between the high and low ranking soldiers.<br><br>The case also comes at a time of heightened tensions between the government and [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html myanmar best beaches]'s military, which still holds key levers of power after Suu Kyi's NLD party won the first free elections in generations in 2015.<br><br>Earlier this month one of her senior aides accused the military of spreading rumours to destabilise the NLD, bringing an angry response from the army in the most public sign yet of simmering discontent between the two.<br><br>Hopes had been high that the party, many of whose MPs spent decades in jail for speaking their minds under [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html myanmar best beaches]'s former junta, would usher in a new era of free speech.<br><br>But defamation prosecutions have soared since they took power in March 2016, with social media satirists, activists and journalists targeted.
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By Sudarshan Varadhan and Mayank Bhardwaj<br><br>NEW DELHI, May 30 (Reuters) - Crop-nourishing monsoon rains lashed the Kerala coast of India's southwest on Tuesday, the India Meteorological Department said, the earliest start to the rains since 2011 which should boost the world's fasting growing economy's agriculture.<br><br>The monsoon delivers about 70 percent of India's annual rainfall, critical for the [http://Www.Ajaxtime.com/?s=farm%20sector farm sector] that accounts for about 15  [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html best beaches myanmar] percent of India's $2 trillion economy and employs more than half of the country's 1.3 billion people.<br><br>India's 260 million farmers depend on monsoon rains to grow crops such as rice, cane, corn, cotton and soybeans because nearly half of the country's farmland lacks irrigation. Higher farm incomes following plentiful rains lift the demand for an array of consumer goods ranging from lipsticks to refrigerators.<br><br>Monsoon rains hit the Kerala coast [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html best beaches in myanmar] line with the forecast of the India Meteorological Department, a senior weather department official, who did not wish to be named as she is not authorised to talk to media, said.<br><br>The [http://Www.Express.Co.uk/search/India%20Meteorological/ India Meteorological] Department declares the arrival of monsoon rains only after parameters measuring the consistency of the rainfall over a defined geography, the intensity, cloudiness and wind speed are satisfied.<br><br>Andaman and Nicobar, islands off India's southeastern coast that are usually the first areas to receive the monsoon, received rainfall six days ahead of schedule earlier this month.<br><br>The weather office on April 18 forecast this year's monsoon rains at 96 percent of a 50-year average of 89 cm.<br><br>As the monsoon intensifies over India, other neighbouring regions have been hit by the [http://Www.Melodyhome.com/category-0/?u=0&q=separate%20Cyclone separate Cyclone] Mora. The storm has caused deaths, destroyed refugee camps and damaged properties across Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and parts of northeastern India.<br><br>Landslides and floods in [http://pixabay.com/en/new-zealand-waterfall-nature-Sri%20Lanka/ Sri Lanka] killed at least 151 people and over 100 people are missing<br><br>Bangladesh has evacuated at least 350,000 people as the cyclone lashed coastal areas on Tuesday, officials said, causing havoc in refugee camps set up for Rohingya Muslims who have fled violence in neighbouring [https://www.myanmartour.com/Ngapali_Myanmar_d80.html best myanmar beaches].<br><br>Heavy rains also lashed India's remote northeastern states of Tripura, Mizoram, Manipur, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh as Mora moved further up the Bay of Bengal.<br><br>However, the cyclone is independent to India's southwest monsoon pattern.<br><br>In May, K.J. Ramesh, director general of the Meteorological Department, told Reuters that the country looked likely to receive higher monsoon rainfall than previously forecast as concern over the El Nino weather condition had eased.<br><br>El Nino, a warming of ocean surface temperatures in the eastern and central Pacific that typically occurs every few years and was linked to crop damage, fires and flash floods, faded in 2016.<br><br>(Reporting by Sudarshan Varadhan and Mayank Bhardwaj; Editing by Malini Menon and Gopakumar Warrier)

Revision as of 03:00, 21 April 2018

By Sudarshan Varadhan and Mayank Bhardwaj

NEW DELHI, May 30 (Reuters) - Crop-nourishing monsoon rains lashed the Kerala coast of India's southwest on Tuesday, the India Meteorological Department said, the earliest start to the rains since 2011 which should boost the world's fasting growing economy's agriculture.

The monsoon delivers about 70 percent of India's annual rainfall, critical for the farm sector that accounts for about 15 best beaches myanmar percent of India's $2 trillion economy and employs more than half of the country's 1.3 billion people.

India's 260 million farmers depend on monsoon rains to grow crops such as rice, cane, corn, cotton and soybeans because nearly half of the country's farmland lacks irrigation. Higher farm incomes following plentiful rains lift the demand for an array of consumer goods ranging from lipsticks to refrigerators.

Monsoon rains hit the Kerala coast best beaches in myanmar line with the forecast of the India Meteorological Department, a senior weather department official, who did not wish to be named as she is not authorised to talk to media, said.

The India Meteorological Department declares the arrival of monsoon rains only after parameters measuring the consistency of the rainfall over a defined geography, the intensity, cloudiness and wind speed are satisfied.

Andaman and Nicobar, islands off India's southeastern coast that are usually the first areas to receive the monsoon, received rainfall six days ahead of schedule earlier this month.

The weather office on April 18 forecast this year's monsoon rains at 96 percent of a 50-year average of 89 cm.

As the monsoon intensifies over India, other neighbouring regions have been hit by the separate Cyclone Mora. The storm has caused deaths, destroyed refugee camps and damaged properties across Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and parts of northeastern India.

Landslides and floods in Sri Lanka killed at least 151 people and over 100 people are missing

Bangladesh has evacuated at least 350,000 people as the cyclone lashed coastal areas on Tuesday, officials said, causing havoc in refugee camps set up for Rohingya Muslims who have fled violence in neighbouring best myanmar beaches.

Heavy rains also lashed India's remote northeastern states of Tripura, Mizoram, Manipur, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh as Mora moved further up the Bay of Bengal.

However, the cyclone is independent to India's southwest monsoon pattern.

In May, K.J. Ramesh, director general of the Meteorological Department, told Reuters that the country looked likely to receive higher monsoon rainfall than previously forecast as concern over the El Nino weather condition had eased.

El Nino, a warming of ocean surface temperatures in the eastern and central Pacific that typically occurs every few years and was linked to crop damage, fires and flash floods, faded in 2016.

(Reporting by Sudarshan Varadhan and Mayank Bhardwaj; Editing by Malini Menon and Gopakumar Warrier)