11/18/2021 - INTEL DROP #3 (2020 ELECTION FRAUD)

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11/18/2021 - INTEL DROP #3 (2020 ELECTION FRAUD)

Post by xotrevor »

Myanmar: The Asia Foundation was created by the CIA as a front for a non-profit company to perform psy-op in predominantly Asian Countries. Guess what just happened in Myanmar… A military coup based on Election Fraud. The Leaders of the winning Myanmar party were arrested… ALSO, as Sec of Def, Mike Pompeo, announced on Twitter they would be paying close attention to the Myanmar Election. Now, if the DoD was monitoring Myanmar Elections and coincidentally the US Space Force intercepted a signal to reset the algorithms during the US Election. Catching this signal made Space Force an official Intelligence Agency.

During his administration, Obama approved a multimillion dollar gov contract before leaving office. This contract allowed a Private US contractor to gain access to secret IT tech, and using the Italian government accessed the Leonardo SPa Satellite owned by the Vatican Church to reset 202 Us Election Voting algorithms.

Coincidentally, in 2017, Q told us to “happy hunt” THE ASIA FOUNDATION with a CIA ‘Stringer.” So I am a seeing some serious evidence that a Shadow government across the world seems to be rigging all the Election processes. One Prime example, the ASIA FOUNDATION

Clinton Foundation / Global Initiative / Myanmar Action Network

NOTE: This page/article has been removed off the Clinton Foundation website for obvious reasons!

The Myanmar Action Network, established in 2014, convenes CGI members—representing corporations, NGOs, and social enterprises—working toward responsible and inclusive investment in the social and economic development of the country. Myanmar continues to capture the international community’s attention as a critical actor in Southeast Asia and an important frontier market.

With a population of 60 million, the country has the potential to quadruple the size of its economy by 2030. However, this growth depends on the resolution of a number of challenges in the country. Significant investments are required in energy, telecommunications, transportation infrastructure, education and workforce development, public health, and economic development. The primary focus areas in 2015 for the Action Network are: 1) enterprise development, 2) education and workforce development, 3) agriculture, 4) public health, and 5) energy.

Objectives

Build and expand a community of CGI members—as well as CGI meeting programming—focused on this topic
Provide an opportunity for members to network, build partnerships, and educate one another about priorities, work underway, and challenges.

Guide members active in this space toward concrete impact through the development of new Commitments to Action
Selected Commitments

Women’s Empowerment in Myanmar: Change for the Future

Commitment by Pact

In 2014, Pact committed to empower women in six townships in Myanmar through financial inclusion, health, and mobile technology. The commitment will leverage funding from The Coca-Cola Foundation to expand Pact's women's empowerment WORTH program, an action-oriented group savings program that encompasses financial literacy, education, community banking, and entrepreneurial training. Pact's training modules are tailored specifically for the region and provide women with the opportunity to develop micro-enterprises and expand opportunities for business entry and growth. The Coca-Cola Foundation's support of WORTH directly aligns with the organization's 5by20 global commitment to empower 5 million women entrepreneurs by 2020. Chevron support will allow women's health groups to be scaled, both as part of WORTH groups and as stand-alone community groups, with maternal, newborn, child health, hygiene, and immunizations. Pact seeks new partners to scale impact and to provide mobile technology and data collections tools.

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Myanmar coup removes central bank chief, alarming global financiers

TOKYO — As news of the military coup in Myanmar reached the halls of the Bank of Japan, staff raced to gather information about the ongoing developments.

“They have apparently kicked out the central bank governor as well.” The shocking news was passed up the command chain at the head office in Tokyo’s Nihonbashi district.

On Feb.1, Myanmar’s military took control of the country’s administrative, legislative and judicial branches, detaining de facto leader State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi and several other democratically elected officials.

It is unclear what happened to former central bank chief Kyaw Kyaw Maung, but deputy governor Bo Bo Nge has been detained, according to media reports. Than Nyein, who served as central banker under the previous junta before the first free election in decades in 2015, has been reappointed to the role.

The Bank of Japan, like most central banks around the world, is watching carefully, to see how the military leaders could affect bilateral and regional cooperation on monetary policy and financial stability.

The move brought back stark memories of the country’s decades of military rule, when it was closed off from much of the world. The period of isolation began to change when the military embraced reforms at the beginning of the last decade, with foreign investors flooding into the largely untapped market rich with natural resources.

Japanese companies and financial institutions made significant inroads in Myanmar in the past decade, expecting the market to grow rapidly as it moved toward democracy.

Japan’s Tokyo headquarters: The BOJ is watching to see how the military leaders could affect cooperation on monetary policy and financial stability. © Reuters
Public and private Japanese players helped Myanmar build its financial and market infrastructure. The Japan International Cooperation Agency contributed to the core systems at the Central Bank of Myanmar, as a joint project with NTT Data and the Daiwa Institute of Research.

The BOJ shares deep connections to the Central Bank of Myanmar as well. It has trained staffers for the Myanmar bank at its head office in Tokyo, and assigned its alumni to advise the Myanmar bank.

What brought Myanmar deeper into the region’s fold was the Chiang Mai Initiative. The currency swap agreement, designed so members assist each other with liquidity in times of crisis, originally launched with Japan, China, South Korea and five countries in Southeast Asia. The remaining members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, including Myanmar, have since joined the framework.

Myanmar formally joined the Chiang Mai Initiative in 2010, during BOJ Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda’s tenure as president of the Asian Development Bank. The ADB on Feb. 2 issued a statement saying it was “deeply concerned about the current situation in Myanmar, which could constitute a serious setback to the country’s transition and development prospects.”

The U.S. has decided to impose sanctions on Myanmar military officials over the coup, while China, a major economic partner for Myanmar, has largely kept silent.

Turning back the clock on democracy could affect future public and private investments in Myanmar. There is also concern over how the coup can affect Myanmar’s membership in the Chiang Mai Initiative.

“The initiative is an important link for Myanmar to the international community, but the country may have a harder time using it under protracted military rule,” a source at the BOJ said. Some at the Japanese bank worry that developments in Myanmar could undermine international monetary cooperation.

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Human Trafficking and the Rohingya Refugee Crisis

NOTE: This page/article has been removed off the CNN website for obvious reasons!

Since August 2017 over 650,000 Rohingya have fled their homes in Myanmar to seek safety in neighboring Bangladesh. Driven from their communities by Myanmar’s armed forces – who have burned villages, raped, and killed infants after ripping them from their mother’s arms – most of the refugees have settled in camps in the Bangladeshi city of Cox’s Bazar. The overcrowded living conditions present many challenges and risks, including human trafficking.

The Rohingya are a majority Muslim ethnic group that reside – prior to their expulsion – primarily in Myanmar. They are effectively stateless, unable to receive citizenship in their home country and unwanted in Bangladesh. In addition to being a fundamental abuse of human rights and dignity, this lack of citizenship reduces economic opportunity, increases isolation, limits mobility and opportunities for family reunification, and heightens the risk of human trafficking. Reports suggest that trafficking is rampant in the refugee camps with men, women, and children exploited for commercial sex and forced and bonded labor. The risk of trafficking is even higher for children, particularly those without parents.

World Vision, Save the Children, and Plan International recently published a report, “Childhood Interrupted: Children’s Voices from the Rohingya Refugee Crisis,” which documents the lives of children in the refugee camps of Cox’s Bazar and highlights the fears they experience on a daily basis, including human trafficking. Though data on human trafficking of Rohingya refugees is scarce, the risk appears to be on the minds of children and adults alike. And while trafficking networks have recruited from Rohingya refugee camps for years, reports depict a substantial increase since the current influx of refugees began in August 2017. Kidnapping is a common tactic of traffickers in the camps. In “Childhood Interrupted,” children discuss traveling in groups to reduce risk, avoiding the bathrooms at night and their fear of being kidnapped from their tents at night.

Traffickers also lure men, women, and children with false job offers in fishing, begging, and, for girls specifically, domestic work. Once an offer is accepted, individuals are often trapped, abused, and not paid the agreed amount, if at all. Physical and sexual abuse is common for women and girls, who are frequently forced into prostitution after accepting jobs as domestic workers. Traffickers prey on the vulnerability of families who are struggling to put food on the table and children that have traveled alone after losing their parents. They will often pay these struggling families for their daughters with the promise of work, though many of the girls are never seen again. While much of the trafficking occurs within Bangladesh, the International Organization of Migration reports that there is evidence of trafficking of Rohingya refugees in India and other regional countries.

The chaos, poverty, and insecurity in the camps has also led to an increase in forced and child marriage as families can view marriage as an opportunity to protect their daughters and reduce their economic overhead. Families are also selling their children into bonded labor, particularly in fish drying. To combat this practice and encourage families to keep children in school, UNICEF has provided 400 families with the same amount of money they would receive from selling a child into bonded labor. Rohingya living in the camps have also made efforts to prevent trafficking and reunite lost or missing children with their families. In fall 2017, the Thomson Reuters Foundation visited the Kutupalong refugee camp and detailed the work of Nazir Ahmed who set up an information center to connect parents with their missing children. He watches the children and, to ensure they are not taken by traffickers, requires the adults that come for them to recite their full name and the child’s confirmation that the adult is their parent.

The stories we’ve heard of human trafficking of Rohingya refugees are, for sure, only a portion of the full trafficking landscape. In the ongoing chaos of the continually expanding camps, human trafficking lacks a reporting mechanism and can go unnoticed and/or unaddressed. Indeed, the current Rohingya refugee crisis is just the latest example of how human trafficking is intertwined in humanitarian settings. As is the case in Libya, Syria, migration routes through the Balkans, and elsewhere, the risk of human trafficking increases during migration crises. As global migration continues to increase, both by force and choice, networks and institutions should be strengthened to combat human trafficking and modern-day slavery. Addressing the added vulnerability of statelessness is a good place to start.

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Myanmar Regime Charges Rival Vice-President with High Treason

Myanmar’s military regime has accused the elected lawmakers’ appointee as vice-president, Mahn Win Khaing Than, of high treason.

He is the third person accused by the coup leaders of high treason.

The police on Wednesday said Mahn Win Khaing Than faces the charges for accepting the appointment from the Committee Representing the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (Union Parliament) or CRPH, made up of deposed National League for Democracy parliamentarians.

Mahn Win Khaing Than, a former speaker, was re-elected in Myawaddy, Karen State, in November’s general election.

The CRPH was formed following the Feb. 1 coup to undermine the legitimacy of the regime at home and abroad. The coup leaders detained the civilian leaders, including State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and President U Win Myint.

The case was opened against him on Wednesday at Myawaddy District Court under Article 122(1) of the Penal Code “for giving a speech as a rival government head of the country” and “calling for the overthrow” of the regime’s governing body, the State Administrative Council (SAC), according to the military-controlled state media.

Article 122(1) carries the death sentence or life imprisonment.

Mahn Win Khaing Than urged the security forces and civil servants who have not yet joined the civil disobedience movement to show allegiance to the citizens not to the interests of “a group of people” during his first address to the country on Saturday.

His warning came as the junta’s security forces stepped up the killing of peaceful protesters and bystanders.

By Wednesday, at least 216 people have been killed by the security forces in crackdowns on protesters and beatings of detained civilians.

On Wednesday, the regime also issued an arrest warrant for U Kyaw Moe Tun, Myanmar’s permanent United Nations representative, who was charged with high treason for his speech to the UN General Assembly on Feb. 26.

U Kyaw Moe Tun says he still represents Myanmar as he was appointed by the democratically elected NLD government, which is still recognized internationally. He said he stands with the CRPH and urged the international community to help restore democracy.

The regime said he had been sacked as a civil servant the following day and accused him of high treason for appealing for global help and “attempting to destroy” the SAC. But U Kyaw Moe Tun continues to represent Myanmar at the UN.

He is charged with high treason under Article 122(2) of the Penal Code, for those committing the offense outside Myanmar.

This week the regime also issued an arrest warrant for Dr. Sasa, the CRPH-appointed international envoy, for committing high treason for his efforts to topple the coup leaders.

Trevor Winchell
Site Admin - Investigative Journalist
American Patriots Forum

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