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A panel discussion in Myanmar about female leadership had two speakers. Both were male.fb899
Another talk, about how to stay safe from the military government’s deadly bombing campaign against civilians, featured four men and no women.
Yet another, an event to raise funds for rebel forces, gathered more than a dozen speakers online, all of them men.
Over the past four years, Ying Lao has documented scores of “manels” — all-male panels — organized by the pro-democracy movement in Myanmar. To her, this exclusion of women is evidence of the deeply ingrained sexism in the country, formerly known as Burma. This suppression of women, she added, is also hurting the yearslong battle to oust Myanmar’s military rulers.
“Unless we are effectively fighting the patriarchy, we will never defeat the military,” said Ms. Ying Lao, who runs the Salween Institute for Public Policy, a Myanmar-focused think tank. “This is the time to be fighting all sorts of oppression.”
ImageMs. Ying Lao and other citizens of Myanmar in Chiang Mai, Thailand, in August. Credit...Lauren DeCicca for The New York TimesImageMs. Ying Lao runs the Salween Institute for Public Policy, a Myanmar-focused think tank.Credit...Lauren DeCicca for The New York TimesWe are having trouble retrieving the article content.
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