U Gambira

http://dbpedia.org/resource/U_Gambira an entity of type: Thing

U Gambira, né Nyi Nyi Lwin le 19 juin 1979 à Pauk dans la région de Magway en Birmanie, est un ancien moine bouddhiste, activiste et leader de la , un groupe moteur lors des protestations politiques de 2007 contre le gouvernement militaire birman. rdf:langString
Nyi Nyi Lwin (Burmese: ညီညီလွင်; MLCTS: Nyi Nyi Lwang; born 19 June 1979), more widely known by his monastic name U Gambira (Burmese: ရှင်ဂမ္ဘီရ), is a former Buddhist monk, activist and a leader of the All-Burma Monks' Alliance, a group which helped lead the 2007 protests against Burma's military government. Following the protests, he went into hiding and published two editorials critical of the Burmese government in The Washington Post and The Guardian on 4 November 2007. He was arrested the same day. rdf:langString
rdf:langString U Gambira
rdf:langString U Gambira
rdf:langString U Gambira
rdf:langString U Gambira
rdf:langString Kaingle village, Pauk Township, Magway Division, Burma
xsd:date 1979-06-19
xsd:integer 31547115
xsd:integer 1122935165
xsd:date 1979-06-19
rdf:langString Nyi Nyi Lwin
rdf:langString Leading the 2007 Saffron Revolution
rdf:langString ရှင်ဂမ္ဘီရ
rdf:langString bur
rdf:langString former Buddhist monk, activist
rdf:langString Candobhāsa , also spelt Sandawbatha
rdf:langString U Min Lwin, Daw Yay
rdf:langString Marie Siochana
rdf:langString U Gambira, né Nyi Nyi Lwin le 19 juin 1979 à Pauk dans la région de Magway en Birmanie, est un ancien moine bouddhiste, activiste et leader de la , un groupe moteur lors des protestations politiques de 2007 contre le gouvernement militaire birman.
rdf:langString Nyi Nyi Lwin (Burmese: ညီညီလွင်; MLCTS: Nyi Nyi Lwang; born 19 June 1979), more widely known by his monastic name U Gambira (Burmese: ရှင်ဂမ္ဘီရ), is a former Buddhist monk, activist and a leader of the All-Burma Monks' Alliance, a group which helped lead the 2007 protests against Burma's military government. Following the protests, he went into hiding and published two editorials critical of the Burmese government in The Washington Post and The Guardian on 4 November 2007. He was arrested the same day. In November 2008, he was sentenced to 68 years in prison, including 12 years hard labour; the sentence was reduced to 65 years on appeal. Gambira reportedly protested his imprisonment by organising chanting with other imprisoned monks, boycotting his trial, and going on hunger strike. Human rights groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch also protested his imprisonment. Gambira was released during a mass pardon of prisoners on 13 January 2012 as part of the 2011–2012 Burmese political reforms. He ceased to be a monk in April 2012, stating that he had been unable to find a monastery to join due to his status as a former prisoner. He was re-arrested at least three times in 2012.
rdf:langString Nyi Nyi Lwang
rdf:langString ညီညီလွင်
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 33826
rdf:langString Candobhāsa (), also spelt Sandawbatha
rdf:langString Nyi Nyi Lwin ()
xsd:gYear 1979

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