Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO)
1.9K posts

Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO)
@Munc0
Producer, playwright, director, actor, presenter & choreographer. A QUT graduate, a recipient of Presidential National Award(2006) & National Youth Award(1999)
Maldives Katılım Eylül 2013
646 Takip Edilen621 Takipçiler
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi

ކޯޕޮރަލް ޕަނިޝްމަންޓްގެ ދަށުން ރާއްޖޭގެ ސްކޫލުތަކުގަ އެއްތެލުން ތެޅުމަކީ، 70ގެ އަހަރުތަކުގެ ތެރޭގާ ކުރިކަމެއް. މިގޮތުން 1976 ވަނަ އަހަރު މަޖީދިއްޔާ ސްކޫލް ހޯލުގެ ސްޓޭޖްމަތީގަ 3 ދަރިވަރެއްގެ އަތްތިލާގަ އެއްތެލުން ތެޅި. މި 'ޕަބްލިކް ކޭނިންގް' ކުރީ ސްކޫލުގެ ހުރިހާ ދަރިވަރުންގެ ކިޔެވުން އެދުވަހު މެދު ކަނޑާލާފަ ކްލާސްތަކުން ނެރިގެން ގެނެސް، ހޯލަށް ޖަމާކުރުމަށްފަހު އެންމެންގެ ކުރިމަތީގަ. އެގޮތުން މަވެސް އެދުވަހު އެތާނގަ ކުޅިބަލަން ހުރިން. އެއްތެލުން ތެޅީ އެޑިއުކޭޝަން މިނިސްޓްެރީގެ ފަރާތުން އެދުވަހު އެކަންކުރަން ހާޒިރުވި ދެމީހުން.
ރާއްޖޭގެ ސްކޫލުތަކުގަ އެއްތެލުން ތެޅުން މަނާކުރީ 1977 ވަނަ އަހަރު ފަހުކޮޅުގަ ހިނގި ހާދިސާއަކާ ގުޅިގެން.
އެއަހަރު މަޖީދިއްޔާ ސްކޫލުގަ މަށާއެކީ ކުލާސް 3D ގަ އުޅުނު ދަރިވަރަކު ކޮންމެވެސް ކަމަކާ ގުޅިގެން ޕްރިންސިޕަލް އޮފީހަށް ގެންދިޔަ. އޭރު މަޖީދިއްޔާ ސްކޫލްގަ ހުރީ ޕާކިސްތާނު ޕްރިންސިޕަލް މިސްޓަރ ޒައިދީ. އުމުރުން 10 ވަރަކަށް އަހަރުގެ ދަރިވަރެއްގެ ގައިގަ ރުންކުރުކަމަށް މަޝްހޫރު ޕްރިންސިޕަލް ޒައިދީ އެއްތެލުން ތަޅާ އަވަދިކޮށްލި. ދަރިވަރު އެނބުރި ކުލާހަށް އައިރު ހަށިގަނޑުގެ 15 ވަރަކަށް ތަނުގަ އެކިވަރަށް ހަންގަނޑު ކެނޑި، ނޮޅި އަދި ޒަހަމްތަކުން ލޭނީރާފަ ހުރި. މި މައްސަލަޔާ ގުޅިގެން ޕްރިންސިޕަލް ޒައިދީ އެޑިއުކޭޝަން މިނިސްޓްރީ އަށް ހާޒިރު ކުރި. އަދި އަހަރުގެ ކިޔެވުން ނުނިމެނީސް ރަށައް ފޮނުވާލި.
Mihaaru@Mihaarunews
ނުކިޔަމަންތެރި ދަރިވަރުންގެ ގައިގައި ޖެހުމުގެ ހުއްދަ ސިންގަޕޫރުގެ ޓީޗަރުންނަށް ދީފި ift.tt/35Qnf6J
DV
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi

5 years since the horrific 6 May 2021 assassination attack on President @MohamedNasheed.
While the physical scars may have faded, the scars on our democracy remain.
Foot soldiers are behind bars, but the masterminds walk free.
Justice delayed is justice denied
English
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi

🚨 BREAKING: China Just Shocked the World with This Bold Move!
China has banned businessmen from profiting off education for kids aged 6–15 😳
No more private school money-making.
No more treating education like a business.
Authorities say: “Children are not a revenue model.”
The goal?
✔️ Reduce family pressure
✔️ Make education more equal
✔️ Kill the profit-driven school system
This decision is now going viral globally and raising one big question:
👉 Should other countries do the same?

English
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi

Govt plans to amend the current RTI Act, even though it’s already considered one of the strongest in the region.
On the latest #EhbasveDhebasvamaa, Information Commissioner @aahidrasheed gets straight to the point: the legislation isn't failing us, what we need is the political will to enforce the one we have.
📺Watch the full episode: youtu.be/E9QcNXhhk-Q?si…

YouTube
English
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi

Tomorrow on #EhbasveDhebasvamaa, Information Commissioner @aahidrasheed joins us to expose the real attitude of Maldivian policymakers towards your right to information.
Catch the new episode tomorrow at 1330 hrs.
English
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi

Her name was Asha Bhosle.
She was born in a small village in Sangli in 1933.
Her father died when she was 9. The family had no money. She started singing at 10 to feed her siblings.
At 16 she eloped against her family’s wishes. Her sister Lata stopped speaking to her. Her family disowned her. The marriage was abusive. It ended in 1960.
She came back with two children and pregnant with a third.
No money. No support. Three children to feed.
She went back to singing.
Nobody wanted her. In the 1950s she got only the songs Lata, Geeta Dutt and Shamshad Begum rejected. Songs for vamps. Cabaret numbers. C grade films.
She sang every single one. Because her children needed to eat.
Then came O.P. Nayyar. Then R.D. Burman. Then the world changed.
Dum Maro Dum. Piya Tu Ab To Aaja. Chura Liya Hai Tumne. She did not just sing these songs. She became them.
In 1995 at age 62 she sang Rangeela Re and silenced an entire generation that had written her off.
In 2011 the Guinness Book of World Records confirmed what India already knew. Most recorded artist in music history. 12,000 songs. 20 languages. 8 decades.
She passed away today at 92 in Mumbai.
The girl who sang vamp songs because nobody else would take her became the voice of a generation.
There will never be another Asha Bhosle.
Rest in peace Asha tai.

English
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi


She had the kind of beauty the world stops for—eyes so vivid they didn’t look real. But that’s not what made her story unforgettable...
Raudha Athif was only 18 when her photos went viral across the internet. A young woman from the Maldives suddenly found herself on global platforms, her striking aqua-blue eyes becoming her signature. But behind the attention, she was quietly building something deeper—studying medicine, determined to follow in her father’s footsteps and become a doctor.
She lived two lives at once. In Bangladesh, she wore modest clothing to attend lectures at Islami Bank Medical College. Outside of class, she stepped in front of the camera—graceful, confident, unforgettable. She never abandoned one dream for the other.
Then came October 2016. She appeared on the cover of Vogue India—a rare moment for a Maldivian model. It should have been the beginning of something extraordinary.
Six months later, she was gone.
On March 29, 2017, Raudha was found in her hostel room in Rajshahi. Authorities initially ruled it self harm, citing heartbreak and emotional distress. But almost immediately, her family pushed back. They saw inconsistencies. They questioned the evidence. They refused to accept a simple answer.
Years passed. Investigations were reopened. Reports were rewritten. In 2022, a court ordered yet another probe.
And still—no answer that everyone agrees on.
That’s what makes this story linger. Not just her beauty. Not just her ambition. But the uncertainty.
A young woman who was balancing two worlds…
gone at 21…and a question that refuses to be buried.
Was it really what they said it was? Or is there more to her story we still haven’t been told?
© She's So Cool
#archaeohistories

English
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi

FRANCE 1945
WHEN SHAME WAS TAKEN OUT ON WOMEN
After the war ended, France did not only celebrate liberation. In towns and cities across the country, around 20,000 women were publicly humiliated. Their heads were shaved, they were paraded through streets, spat on, beaten, and marked for life. Many were accused of “horizontal collaboration,” not for fighting, not for betraying the nation, but for relationships, conversations, dancing, or simply surviving under occupation. Some had German lovers. Some were translators. Some were accused with no proof at all.
English
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi
Mohamed Munthasir (MUNCO) retweetledi













