Orwell in Burma, 'Flatulent' Travel Writing, and Banning the Word 'Plantation'

George Orwell (né Eric Blair) left England for Burma at age 19, a freshly minted graduate of Eton College, the poshest school in the British Empire. The year was 1922, and Orwell/Blair would remain in Burma until 1927, a member of the imperial police force. What little we know of his time there can be learned from his first novel, Burmese Days (1934), and two essays, "A Hanging" (1931) and "Shooting an Elephant" (1936). His Burmese days have always carried with them an air of mystery and an absence of detail, which drove Paul Theroux—travel writer, essayist, novelist, sage—to set himself the task of imagining the young man's years in this eastern edge of the Raj. The result is Burma Sahib, a novel published earlier this year, that brings to life Orwell/Blair's time in Burma.

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FACT CHECK: ‘Kuki Militants’ Video Is From December 2023 And Deceptively Edited

A video shared on X claims to show Kuki militants threatening Imphal, India. 🚨 Breaking News: #KukiMilitant issues warning of potential attacks on Imphal city within the next week. Authorities are urged to heighten security measures and ensure the safety of residents. Stay vigilant and report any suspicious activity.#AbrogateSoO #IndiaUnderAttack pic.twitter.com/tewHM4382Y — Pirthiviraj Shougrakpam (@Pirthivira35839) February […]

The Biden administration determined Myanmar has been committing 'genocide' and 'crimes against humanity'



The Biden administration formally determined that the military of Myanmar has been committing genocide against the country’s Rohingya minority.

CNBC reported that U.S. officials said that the Myanmarese military has been perpetrating acts of violence that amount to genocide and “crimes against humanity.” The Biden administration formally recognizing these acts as genocide will make it easier for the international community to hold Myanmar’s ruling junta accountable.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to announce the decision on Monday at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. The Holocaust Memorial Museum is currently hosting a special exhibit on the plight of the Rohingya people.

The atrocities being carried out on the Rohingya date back to 2017 when Myanmar’s armed forces launched an operation that forced nearly 750,000 Rohingya from their homes and into the neighboring country of Bangladesh.

In Bangladesh, the Rohingya people fell victim to mass rape, murder, and arson.

A senior official in the U.S. State Department said that formally designating the plight of the Rohingya as “genocide” will “make it harder for them to commit further abuses [against the Rohingya].”

Myanmar’s military has previously denied committing acts of genocide against the predominantly Muslim Rohingya. It has insisted that operations were carried out against terrorists in the region where the Rohingya historically reside.

In 2018, the United Nations concluded that the military’s campaign against the Rohingya included “genocidal acts.”

Another senior official in the State Department said that Blinken’s announcement on Monday will galvanize the international community to come to the aid of the Rohingya people.

The official said, “It’s really signaling to the world and especially to victims and survivors within the Rohingya community and more broadly than the United States recognizes the gravity of what’s happening.”

The first official echoed this sentiment by saying: “It’s going to enhance our position as we try to build international support to try to prevent further atrocities and hold those accountable.”

That said, a determination of genocide does not automatically initiate punitive action by the United States.

Just days after Joe Biden was sworn into office, the Myanmarese military staged a coup and seized control of the country.

The coup, led by Commander in Chief Min Aung Hlaing, quickly suppressed a public uprising and killed more than 1,600 people in the process.

In response to the coup, the United States and its Western allies sanctioned the military junta that took power but has been unable to convince them to relinquish power and restore democratic role.

American Journalist Seized by Burmese Military Suffers in Prison

The Biden administration is struggling to secure the release of an American journalist imprisoned by the Burmese military due to his newspaper’s reporting of critical of human rights abuses in the country.

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Lawmakers Launch Task Force To Bring Home Americans Held Hostage Overseas

Representatives whose constituents are being held hostage by dictators and terrorists overseas want to put colleagues on alert about the growing problem of the international abduction of Americans through a new congressional task force.

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Family of Imprisoned American Journalist Urges Biden to Bring Him Home

The family of an American journalist unjustly imprisoned in Burma after his newspaper's critical reporting on human rights abuses is urging the Biden administration to take action in order to bring him home.

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Obama’s Meddling In Myanmar Is Now Joe Biden’s Mess To Clean Up

Many signs pointed to an inevitable conclusion that Myanmar's so-called transition to a democracy was a farce. Nevertheless, Obama embraced it wholeheartedly.

Biden Considers Reinstating Burma Sanctions Axed by Top Asia Adviser

In the wake of a Burmese military coup, Joe Biden is considering reinstating sanctions on Burma that his own Asia policy czar repealed.

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