8chan/8kun QResearch Posts (2)
#13362936 at 2021-04-05 05:09:50 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #16929: EBake in the air tonight
The Central Bank of Myanmar is NOT owned by the Rothschild's/Soros. Is the military saving the country from a Globalist coup?
Kyaw Kyaw Muang removed by Military shortly after Biden was sworn in. Timing is everything.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Myanmar-Coup/Myanmar-coup-removes-central-bank-chief-alarming-global-financiers
>Last July, the Central Bank released a set of modern prudential regulations which, while signed by Kyaw Kyaw Maung, were closer to International Monetary Fund blueprints than junta-era edicts.
https://www.frontiermyanmar.net/en/president-nominates-central-bank-governor-for-another-term/
Soros in Burna in 2013 aiding the "88 Generation" group.
https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/george-soros-gets-down-to-business-with-88-generation-leaders.html
CNN "crew" (double agents) infiltrate Myanmar and "talk" to citizens (insurgents), who are quickly taken to undisclosed black site.
https://www.myanmar-now.org/en/news/yangon-residents-snatched-after-visit-by-cnn-crew-being-held-at-military-interrogation-center
https://www.centralbanking.com/central-banks/governance/people/7743226/myanmar-junta-names-new-head-of-central-bank
#12928652 at 2021-02-15 01:31:41 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #16502: We Have Only Just Begun To MAGA Edition
I'm asking what has the central bank go to do with election fraud?
Myanmar coup removes central bank chief, alarming global financiers
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Myanmar-Coup/Myanmar-coup-removes-central-bank-chief-alarming-global-financiers
TOKYO – As news of the military coup in Myanmar reached the halls of the Bank of Japan, staff raced to gather information about the ongoing developments.
"They have apparently kicked out the central bank governor as well." The shocking news was passed up the command chain at the head office in Tokyo's Nihonbashi district.
On Feb.1, Myanmar's military took control of the country's administrative, legislative and judicial branches, detaining de facto leader State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi and several other democratically elected officials.
It is unclear what happened to former central bank chief Kyaw Kyaw Maung, but deputy governor Bo Bo Nge has been detained, according to media reports. Than Nyein, who served as central banker under the previous junta before the first free election in decades in 2015, has been reappointed to the role.
The Bank of Japan, like most central banks around the world, is watching carefully, to see how the military leaders could affect bilateral and regional cooperation on monetary policy and financial stability.
The move brought back stark memories of the country's decades of military rule, when it was closed off from much of the world. The period of isolation began to change when the military embraced reforms at the beginning of the last decade, with foreign investors flooding into the largely untapped market rich with natural resources.
Japanese companies and financial institutions made significant inroads in Myanmar in the past decade, expecting the market to grow rapidly as it moved toward democracy.
Public and private Japanese players helped Myanmar build its financial and market infrastructure. The Japan International Cooperation Agency contributed to the core systems at the Central Bank of Myanmar, as a joint project with NTT Data and the Daiwa Institute of Research.
The BOJ shares deep connections to the Central Bank of Myanmar as well. It has trained staffers for the Myanmar bank at its head office in Tokyo, and assigned its alumni to advise the Myanmar bank.
What brought Myanmar deeper into the region's fold was the Chiang Mai Initiative. The currency swap agreement, designed so members assist each other with liquidity in times of crisis, originally launched with Japan, China, South Korea and five countries in Southeast Asia. The remaining members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, including Myanmar, have since joined the framework.
Myanmar formally joined the Chiang Mai Initiative in 2010, during BOJ Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda's tenure as president of the Asian Development Bank. The ADB on Feb. 2 issued a statement saying it was "deeply concerned about the current situation in Myanmar, which could constitute a serious setback to the country's transition and development prospects."
The U.S. has decided to impose sanctions on Myanmar military officials over the coup, while China, a major economic partner for Myanmar, has largely kept silent.
Turning back the clock on democracy could affect future public and private investments in Myanmar. There is also concern over how the coup can affect Myanmar's membership in the Chiang Mai Initiative.
"The initiative is an important link for Myanmar to the international community, but the country may have a harder time using it under protracted military rule," a source at the BOJ said. Some at the Japanese bank worry that developments in Myanmar could undermine international monetary cooperation.
8kun Midnight Riders Posts (2)
#57229 at 2021-02-14 03:45:53 (UTC+1)
QR Midnight Riders #264: Trump Peach Mint Team Killin' It Edition
>>57196
Central Bank of Myanmar
Its headquarter located in Naypyidaw, and it has branches in Yangon and Mandalay. The Governor is Kyaw Kyaw Maung and three Vice Governors are Soe Min, Soe Thein, Bobo Aung (Mohammed Aarif) and Bo Bo Nge. The Central Bank of Myanmar became an autonomous and independent regulatory body by the Central Bank of Myanmar Law which was enacted by the Myanmar Parliament in 2013. The Central Bank of Myanmar was founded as the Union Bank of Burma on 3 April 1948 by the Union Bank of Burma Act, 1947 and took over the functions of the Rangoon branches of the Reserve Bank of India. The Union Bank of Burma was opened at the corner of Merchant Road and Sule Pagoda Road and had a sole right of currency issue.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Bank_of_Myanmar
Life After Burma: The Saga of Bo Bo Nge
https://www.aier.org/article/life-after-burma-the-saga-of-bo-bo-nge/
April 2, 2019
The real driving forces behind Myanmar's opium trade
https://asiatimes.com/2019/04/the-real-driving-forces-behind-myanmars-opium-trade/
#57196 at 2021-02-14 02:17:35 (UTC+1)
QR Midnight Riders #264: Trump Peach Mint Team Killin' It Edition
Myanmar coup removes central bank chief, alarming global financiers
As news of the military coup in Myanmar reached the halls of the Bank of Japan, staff raced to gather information about the ongoing developments. "They have apparently kicked out the central bank governor as well." The shocking news was passed up the command chain at the head office in Tokyo's Nihonbashi district.
On Feb.1, Myanmar's military took control of the country's administrative, legislative and judicial branches, detaining de facto leader State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi and several other democratically elected officials. It is unclear what happened to former central bank chief Kyaw Kyaw Maung, but deputy governor Bo Bo Nge has been detained, according to media reports. Than Nyein, who served as central banker under the previous junta before the first free election in decades in 2015, has been reappointed to the role.
The Bank of Japan, like most central banks around the world, is watching carefully, to see how the military leaders could affect bilateral and regional cooperation on monetary policy and financial stability. The move brought back stark memories of the country's decades of military rule, when it was closed off from much of the world. The period of isolation began to change when the military embraced reforms at the beginning of the last decade, with foreign investors flooding into the largely untapped market rich with natural resources.
Japanese companies and financial institutions made significant inroads in Myanmar in the past decade, expecting the market to grow rapidly as it moved toward democracy. Public and private Japanese players helped Myanmar build its financial and market infrastructure. The Japan International Cooperation Agency contributed to the core systems at the Central Bank of Myanmar, as a joint project with NTT Data and the Daiwa Institute of Research. The BOJ shares deep connections to the Central Bank of Myanmar as well. It has trained staffers for the Myanmar bank at its head office in Tokyo, and assigned its alumni to advise the Myanmar bank.
What brought Myanmar deeper into the region's fold was the Chiang Mai Initiative. The currency swap agreement, designed so members assist each other with liquidity in times of crisis, originally launched with Japan, China, South Korea and five countries in Southeast Asia. The remaining members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, including Myanmar, have since joined the framework.
Myanmar formally joined the Chiang Mai Initiative in 2010, during BOJ Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda's tenure as president of the Asian Development Bank. The ADB on Feb. 2 issued a statement saying it was "deeply concerned about the current situation in Myanmar, which could constitute a serious setback to the country's transition and development prospects." The U.S. has decided to impose sanctions on Myanmar military officials over the coup, while China, a major economic partner for Myanmar, has largely kept silent.
Turning back the clock on democracy could affect future public and private investments in Myanmar. There is also concern over how the coup can affect Myanmar's membership in the Chiang Mai Initiative.
"The initiative is an important link for Myanmar to the international community, but the country may have a harder time using it under protracted military rule," a source at the BOJ said. Some at the Japanese bank worry that developments in Myanmar could undermine international monetary cooperation.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Myanmar-Coup/Myanmar-coup-removes-central-bank-chief-alarming-global-financiers
8chan/8kun QRB Posts (1)
#43571 at 2021-04-06 03:38:47 (UTC+1)
QRB General #75: NYPD Has Another Suicide Edition
>>>/qresearch/13362936
Interesting Myanmar Links
The Central Bank of Myanmar is NOT owned by the Rothschild's/Soros. Is the military saving the country from a Globalist coup?
Kyaw Kyaw Muang removed by Military shortly after Biden was sworn in. Timing is everything.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Myanmar-Coup/Myanmar-coup-removes-central-bank-chief-alarming-global-financiers
>Last July, the Central Bank released a set of modern prudential regulations which, while signed by Kyaw Kyaw Maung, were closer to International Monetary Fund blueprints than junta-era edicts.
https://www.frontiermyanmar.net/en/president-nominates-central-bank-governor-for-another-term/
Soros in Burna in 2013 aiding the "88 Generation" group.
https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/george-soros-gets-down-to-business-with-88-generation-leaders.html
CNN "crew" (double agents) infiltrate Myanmar and "talk" to citizens (insurgents), who are quickly taken to undisclosed black site.
https://www.myanmar-now.org/en/news/yangon-residents-snatched-after-visit-by-cnn-crew-being-held-at-military-interrogation-center
https://www.centralbanking.com/central-banks/governance/people/7743226/myanmar-junta-names-new-head-of-central-bank