- Hein,
Thakin Bo,
Thakin Hla Pe (Bo Let Ya),
Thakin Soe,
Yèbaw Ba Tin (H. N. Goshal), and
Yèbaw Tun
Maung (Amar Nag). An
armed wing was
formed shortly afterwards...
-
Yebaw Po Than
Gyaung (Burmese: ရဲဘော်ဖိုးသံချောင်း ; born 1945) is a
Burmese revolutionary, writer,
journalist and
current spokesperson of the Communist...
- Amar Nag
alias Yebaw Tun
Maung or U Hla (1917–1968), was one of the
founding leaders of the
communist movement in Burma. Dr. Nag was
active in the struggle...
- (Burma) ("red flags") led by
Thakin Soe, the People's
Volunteer Organisation (
Yèbaw Hpyu) led by Bo La
Yaung (a
member of the
Thirty Comrades), the Revolutionary...
-
position and
monks (e.g., U Thant, U Nu).
Yebaw (ရဲဘော်): Used to
refer to men in
revolutionary groups (e.g.,
Yèbaw Tun Maung).
According to The
Chicago Manual...
- Mukerjee,
party name
Yebaw Phyu Win (Burmese: ရဲဘော်ဖြူဝင်း), was a Bengal-born
Burmese communist leader.
Ahead of the
Second World War, he took employment...
-
Thakin Ba Tin and
Yèbaw Htay were
suspended from the
politburo on 27
April 1967,
while a
number of
other senior members, such as
Yèbaw Ba Khet, left the...
- been
formed into a
paramilitary force under Aung San,
called the
Pyithu yèbaw tat or People's
Volunteer Organisation (PVO), and were
openly drilling in...
-
exchanges between India and
Bangladesh (India–Bangladesh enclaves). Thit Maung,
Yebaw (1989).
Civil Insurgency in Burma. Yangon:
Ministry of
Information (Myanmar)...
- Ye Baw Than Khae ‹See Tfd›သံခဲ
Yebaw Than Khe at conference, 2014
Chairman of the All
Burma Students'
Democratic Front In****bent ****umed
office 10 April...