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Anxious families of detained a <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.de>stanley cup</a> ctivists rushed to Myanmars prisons on Friday, as officials indicated dozens of students could be freed after Aung San Suu Kyi hinted at a mass amnesty for political prisoners.        Family members welcome student protest leaders Nandar Sitt Aung  L  and Phyo Phyo Aung  R  as they arrives for a hearing at her trial in Tharrawaddy town, Bago Region in Myanmar on April 8, 2016. AFP Photo     In her first formal policy pledge since her government took office in the former junta-r <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup</a> un nation last week, Suu Kyi said Thursday she would prioritise releasing activists -- an issue laden with significance for herself and scores of MPs in her party once jailed for democracy  <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley cup</a> activism.   More than a hundred prisoners of conscience and students remain locked up in Myanmar, despite reforms in recent years as the military loosened its grip on power after half a century of repressive junta rule. On Friday morning families gathered at prisons in Yangon, the largest city, and in central Tharrawaddy, where students have been detained for more than a year over an education protest that was crushed in a violent police crackdown in March 2015. Expectant families clutching bunches of flowers also greeted the students as they arrived by a police truck at a nearby courthouse, where officials said they were already preparing to free the students.  I have instructed my staff to enable  their release  as soon as the prosecutor asks to withdraw the case. Our side is ready to p Vadw Turkey shot down Russian warplane to protect IS oil trade: Putin
India has  unjustifiably  named Lashkar-e-Tai <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.de>stanley cup</a> ba  LeT  leaders Hafiz Saeed and Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi in the Mumbai terror attack case, a Jamaat-ud-Dawa spokesperson said <a href=https://www.adidascampus.com.de>adidas campus</a>  after an Indian court held Pakistani national Ajmal Amir Kasab guilty of the 26/11 mayhem.        HT Image    A special court in Mumbai on Monday pronounced Kasab, who was the lone terrorist arrested for the November 2008 attack that left 166 people dead, guilty while acquitting the two Indian co-accused -- Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed. It also found the involvement of 20 <a href=https://www.adidasoriginal.de>adidas originals</a>  other Pakistanis, including Lakhvi, Saeed and Abu Hamza.    Jamaat-ud-Dawa  JD  spokesperson Yahya Mujahid said in Lahore on Monday:  Right after the Mumbai attacks, Saeed categorically denied any involvement of his organisation in a press conference held the next day.  He said the attorney general of Pakistan, advocate general of Punjab and other government law officials had put forth all evidence before the Lahore High Court  LHC  on the matter.   After careful review and diligent hearings, a full bench of the LHC decided that all the accusations against Saeed were baseless,  Daily Times quoted him as saying. The 60-hour audacious attack that began on the night of Nov 26, 2008 and went on till the afternoon of Nov 29, 2009 was carried out by 10 Pakistani terrorists, including Kasab.  They targeted sites like the crowded Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus railway station, the iconic Taj Mahal Palace and Tower Hotel, the nearby Hotel Oberoi-Trid
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