ဂ်ပန္ေရာက္ ျမန္မာတုိ႔ ႀက့ံဖံြ႔အစုိးရကုိ ဆႏၵျပ
ဓာတ္ပုံသတင္း
ေမ ၂၈၊ ၂၀၁၁
ယမန္ေန႔က တုိက်ဳိျမဳိ႕ ဂ်ပန္ ႏုိင္ငံျခားေရး ၀န္ႀကီးဌာန ေရွ႕တြင္ ဆႏၵျပေနေသာ ျမန္မာ့ဒီမုိကေရစီအေရး လႈပ္ရွားသူမ်ား (AP photos)
A man walks past a group of Myanmar's pro-democracy activists and their supporters staging a protest with portraits of de facto opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in front of Japan's Foreign Ministry in Tokyo Friday, May 27, 2011. The group claimed the military would continue to hold supreme political power in the country's first civilian government since 1962 that took control in March. Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, which won the last elections in 1988 but was blocked from taking power by the military, boycotted the poll last November, claiming it was held under unfair conditions.
A man walks past a group of Myanmar's pro-democracy activists and their supporters staging a protest with portraits of de facto opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in front of Japan's Foreign Ministry in Tokyo Friday, May 27, 2011. The group claimed the military would continue to hold supreme political power in the country's first civilian government since 1962 that took control in March. Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, which won the last elections in 1988 but was blocked from taking power by the military, boycotted the poll last November, claiming it was held under unfair conditions.
ဓာတ္ပုံသတင္း
ေမ ၂၈၊ ၂၀၁၁
ယမန္ေန႔က တုိက်ဳိျမဳိ႕ ဂ်ပန္ ႏုိင္ငံျခားေရး ၀န္ႀကီးဌာန ေရွ႕တြင္ ဆႏၵျပေနေသာ ျမန္မာ့ဒီမုိကေရစီအေရး လႈပ္ရွားသူမ်ား (AP photos)
A man walks past a group of Myanmar's pro-democracy activists and their supporters staging a protest with portraits of de facto opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in front of Japan's Foreign Ministry in Tokyo Friday, May 27, 2011. The group claimed the military would continue to hold supreme political power in the country's first civilian government since 1962 that took control in March. Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, which won the last elections in 1988 but was blocked from taking power by the military, boycotted the poll last November, claiming it was held under unfair conditions.
A man walks past a group of Myanmar's pro-democracy activists and their supporters staging a protest with portraits of de facto opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in front of Japan's Foreign Ministry in Tokyo Friday, May 27, 2011. The group claimed the military would continue to hold supreme political power in the country's first civilian government since 1962 that took control in March. Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, which won the last elections in 1988 but was blocked from taking power by the military, boycotted the poll last November, claiming it was held under unfair conditions.
Comments