
Regime envoy attends Ayatollah’s funeral in Iran; Starlink satellite internet blackout in Myanmar?
Regime envoy attends Ayatollah’s funeral in Iran Tin Aung San, the regime President’s Office Minister and National Security Advisor to Min Aung Hlaing, attended Iran’s late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s funeral in Tehran on Friday, regime media reported. Khamenei was assassinated on the first day of combined U.S.-Israeli airstrikes targeting high-ranking Iranian regime officials in Tehran on Feb. 28. Regime media reported that Tin Aung San held talks with officials from Iran’s Ministries of Defence and Foreign Affairs on enhancing bilateral relations and economic cooperation July 1-5. Tin Aung San was elected to the Pyithu Hlutttaw, or lower house of parliament, for Naypyidaw’s Ottarathiri Township representing the military-proxy Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) in the regime’s 2025-26 elections. He served as the Burma Navy chief from 2015-21, then as one of the regime’s six deputy prime ministers and defence minister in August 2023 but was dismissed from the post in December 2024. Tin Aung San has been sanctioned by the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand, and the E.U., since 2021. Check out our DVB Myanmar Sanctions Monitor Starlink satellite internet blackout in Myanmar? Thousands of residents and resistance fighters in Burma are facing sudden communication blackouts after Starlink deactivated terminals across the country. The move, aimed at crippling illicit cyber scam operations, has inadvertently severed a vital lifeline for regions under a military-imposed internet shutdown. According to local sources, terminals have been offline since Thursday in resistance-controlled areas, including Kachin, Karenni, and Arakan states, as well as the Mandalay and Sagaing regions. Service providers estimate that more than 20 per cent of the Starlink terminals currently active inside Burma have been deactivated. Protest at Chinese Consulate in Chiang Mai turns chaotic A peaceful rally outside the Chinese Consulate General in Chiang Mai, Thailand, on Monday descended into chaos after Thai police physically blocked protesters from approaching the building. The rally was organized to demand accountability from Beijing regarding toxic heavy metal contamination linked to Chinese-backed mining operations in neighbouring Burma. Organized by the People’s Network for the Protection of the Kok, Sai, Ruak, and Mekong Rivers, the rally sought to draw international attention to the devastating transboundary impacts of unregulated rare earth and gold mining along the Burma-Thailand border. The rally was abruptly disrupted when Thai police deployed officers and barricades to prevent the crowd from reaching the front of the consulate. News by Region ARAKAN—Residents of Thandwe Township told DVB that over 80 youth detained for months without trial for attempting “to leave Arakan State” were forcibly recruited by the Arakan Army (AA) in late June. Thandwe, located 180 miles (290 km) south of the state capital Sittwe, was seized by the AA in July 2024. The AA issued a National Defence Emergency Provision on March 18, 2025, barring males 18-45 and females 18-25 from leaving the 14 of 17 townships under its control “until the emergency period caused by the ongoing conflict ends.” All youth are required to serve at least two years with the AA. BAGO—Residents in Nattalin Township told DVB that two people were injured and 60 homes were damaged by a tornado on Sunday. Damaged power lines and telecommunications towers have hampered damage assessments. Nattalin is located 137 miles (220 km) north of the region’s capital. MAGWAY—The statue of Burma independence hero General Aung San, the father of detained State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, was toppled and destroyed in Yesagyo Township on Sunday. The statue was unveiled on July 14, 2019, during the National League for Democracy (NLD) government. Residents told DVB that the nine-foot (2.7-metre) statue, weighing around 4,900 kg, was removed ahead of Martyrs’ Day on July 19, which commemorates the assassination of Aung San in 1947. At least eight Aung San statues have reportedly been demolished nationwide since the 2021 coup. The post Regime envoy attends Ayatollah’s funeral in Iran; Starlink satellite internet blackout in Myanmar?
Regime envoy attends Ayatollah’s funeral in Iran Tin Aung San, the regime President’s Office Minister and National Security Advisor to Min Aung Hlaing, attended Iran’s late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s funeral in Tehran on Friday, regime media reported. Khamenei was assassinated on the first day of combined U.S.-Israeli airstrikes targeting high-ranking Iranian regime officials in Tehran on Feb. 28. Regime media reported that Tin Aung San held talks with officials from Iran’s Ministries of Defence and Foreign Affairs on enhancing bilateral relations and economic cooperation July 1-5. Tin Aung San was elected to the Pyithu Hlutttaw, or lower house of parliament, for Naypyidaw’s Ottarathiri Township representing the military-proxy Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) in the regime’s 2025-26 elections. He served as the Burma Navy chief from 2015-21, then as one of the regime’s six deputy prime ministers and defence minister in August 2023 but was dismissed from the post in December 2024. Tin Aung San has been sanctioned by the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand, and the E.U., since 2021. Check out our DVB Myanmar Sanctions Monitor Starlink satellite internet blackout in Myanmar? Thousands of residents and resistance fighters in Burma are facing sudden communication blackouts after Starlink deactivated terminals across the country. The move, aimed at crippling illicit cyber scam operations, has inadvertently severed a vital lifeline for regions under a military-imposed internet shutdown. According to local sources, terminals have been offline since Thursday in resistance-controlled areas, including Kachin, Karenni, and Arakan states, as well as the Mandalay and Sagaing regions. Service providers estimate that more than 20 per cent of the Starlink terminals currently active inside Burma have been deactivated. Protest at Chinese Consulate in Chiang Mai turns chaotic A peaceful rally outside the Chinese Consulate General in Chiang Mai, Thailand, on Monday descended into chaos after Thai police physically blocked protesters from approaching the building. The rally was organized to demand accountability from Beijing regarding toxic heavy metal contamination linked to Chinese-backed mining operations in neighbouring Burma. Organized by the People’s Network for the Protection of the Kok, Sai, Ruak, and Mekong Rivers, the rally sought to draw international attention to the devastating transboundary impacts of unregulated rare earth and gold mining along the Burma-Thailand border. The rally was abruptly disrupted when Thai police deployed officers and barricades to prevent the crowd from reaching the front of the consulate. News by Region ARAKAN—Residents of Thandwe Township told DVB that over 80 youth detained for months without trial for attempting “to leave Arakan State” were forcibly recruited by the Arakan Army (AA) in late June. Thandwe, located 180 miles (290 km) south of the state capital Sittwe, was seized by the AA in July 2024. The AA issued a National Defence Emergency Provision on March 18, 2025, barring males 18-45 and females 18-25 from leaving the 14 of 17 townships under its control “until the emergency period caused by the ongoing conflict ends.” All youth are required to serve at least two years with the AA. BAGO—Residents in Nattalin Township told DVB that two people were injured and 60 homes were damaged by a tornado on Sunday. Damaged power lines and telecommunications towers have hampered damage assessments. Nattalin is located 137 miles (220 km) north of the region’s capital. MAGWAY—The statue of Burma independence hero General Aung San, the father of detained State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, was toppled and destroyed in Yesagyo Township on Sunday. The statue was unveiled on July 14, 2019, during the National League for Democracy (NLD) government. Residents told DVB that the nine-foot (2.7-metre) statue, weighing around 4,900 kg, was removed ahead of Martyrs’ Day on July 19, which commemorates the assassination of Aung San in 1947. At least eight Aung San statues have reportedly been demolished nationwide since the 2021 coup. The post Regime envoy attends Ayatollah’s funeral in Iran; Starlink satellite internet blackout in Myanmar? appeared first on DVB.
多角的分析
直接の経済ニュースではありませんが、治安と司法の信頼は地域経済の土台です。職場での暴力や未成年者保護への不安が強まると、夜間営業、観光、雇用、地域サービス業のリスク認識が高まります。
投資家目線では、個別事件よりも法執行の予見可能性が焦点です。加害者への対応が曖昧になれば、ローカルビジネスの統治リスクや従業員保護の弱さとして評価されやすくなります。
オッタラティリ郡区の現場では、安全を「個人間の事件」で片づけず、誰が守り、誰が説明するのかを可視化する圧力が強まります。当局の動きは、被害者側が孤立しやすい環境で、沈黙より手続きを選ぶための足場になります。
市民にとっては、自分や家族が被害に遭った時に公正な手続きへアクセスできるのかが最大の関心です。地域団体が声を上げることで、事件の風化を防ぎ、被害者側の孤立を和らげる意味があります。
背景・歴史的文脈
このニュースは、ミャンマーの地域社会で法の支配と弱者保護がどこまで機能しているかを映す事案です。暴力事件そのものに加え、女性団体や市民社会が司法手続きを求めて声を上げている点が重要です。軍政下では警察・司法への信頼が揺らぎやすく、個別事件が地域の不安や統治への不信に直結します。
原文ソース
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