Qommodity’s Qaa Token Available on Bitmart Starting August 4

Qommodity will launch its QAA token on the crypto trading platform Bitmart, on the 4th of August. This is the third centralized crypto exchange that will trade the QAA token, alongside Latoken and LBank. The QAA token acts as a voucher that gives buyers the possibility to swap it for the QAAA Security Token at the market value price at the moment of exchange, when the QAAA launch is imminent.

Featured Image for Qommodity QAA Ltd.

Featured Image for Qommodity QAA Ltd.

DUBAI, Arab Emirates, Aug. 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Crypto enthusiasts will be able to purchase Qommodity’s QAA token on an additional crypto exchange platform starting August 4. Founded in 2017, BitMart has since grown into a large cryptocurrency trading platform, with over 5 million customers in more than 180 countries. According to CoinGecko, the company ranks in the top 20 exchanges in the world.

The QAA token is a special token in the sense that it will be interchangeable with the revolutionary asset-backed QAAA, once the latter is launched.

QAAA is a one-of-a-kind security token that will build the bridge between the traditional financial system and digital currency. The assets that stand behind it are unexploited natural resources.

Qommodity’s exploration licenses now cover a total area of 354.5 sq. km in Sierra Leone, valuing the in-ground resources through the certification standard NI43-101.

Through this, the company aims to trigger the largest transition of wealth in the history of mankind since these untapped resources will be made suitable for monetization within the monetary system.

Besides creating an absolutely unique hybrid cryptocurrency, Qommodity also plans to change the lives of millions of people who are now facing extreme poverty. By leaving the precious resources in the ground, the project aims to increase the value of the land, which will bring financial benefits and business opportunities to local communities.

Qommodity’s project will also help provide solutions to basic human needs, such as clean water, and access to quality medicine and education.

The system behind the QAA token is backed with sophisticated customer support to make sure that everyone is able to purchase the token without any experience in finance or cryptocurrencies.

Starting August 4, Qommodity’s QAA token will be available for purchase on Bitmart. The QAA is already available on Latoken, LBank, and Qommodity’s website:

BitMart: https://www.bitmart.com
LBank: https://www.lbank.info
Latoken: https://latoken.com
www.qommodity.io

Read more about Qommodity’s values and mission on their website. Follow the company on social media to keep up with the project development and discover the next platform they’ll be listed on:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Qommodity.io 
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/qommodity.io
Twitter: https://twitter.com/qommodityio 
Telegram Channel: https://t.me/qommodityglobal 
Telegram Group: https://t.me/Qommodityio 
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@qommodity.io
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/Qommodityio 
Discord: https://discord.gg/XZ3NNUvPrH
Medium: https://medium.com/@qommodityio 

www.qommodity.io
marketing@qommodity.io

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Qommodity’s Qaa Token Available on Bitmart Starting August 4

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Myanmar photographer who shot anti-junta protests dies in custody

A photographer known for documenting anti-junta protests and other activities has died in custody after being detained by authorities in Myanmar’s embattled Sagaing region over the weekend, family members and friends said Monday.

Aye Kyaw, 48, who runs the Hayman Photography studio in Sagaing’s former capital, Sagaing city, was arrested by junta troops who arrived at his home in a convoy of six military vehicles at 2 a.m. on July 30, citing a “tip” that there were weapons stashed there, his relatives told RFA Burmese.

Sources close to Aye Kyaw said that the administrator of Aung Chanthar ward, where the photographer lived, contacted his family around noon the same day to inform them that he had died and that his body was being held in the mortuary of Sagaing City Hospital. The family members were told they “could retrieve it if you want it, or leave it there.”

An official from the Ohbo Health and Social Assistance Association, a charity burial service in Sagaing, told RFA that his group had taken Aye Kyaw’s body from the hospital to a religious hall in Aung Chanthar ward to prepare it for burial.

“We took the body, as requested [by the family], from the morgue and sent it to the village ‘zayat’ (religious hall),” said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“We didn’t see any superficial wounds on the body but I noticed his chest was sewn up like a postmortem. I didn’t see any injuries or leaking body fluids.”

He said that the family buried Aye Kyaw on Sunday.

Another friend of Aye Kyaw’s family, who also declined to be named, told RFA that soldiers had searched the photographer’s home for weapons during his arrest but found nothing.

“The army came in six cars and arrested him. Three were outside, three entered the compound,” the source said.

“[The troops] said they would shoot if the gate was not opened. They searched the entire house but they found nothing. Nothing at all.”

The source said Aye Kyaw’s body was “left outside” by staff at the hospital for the Ohbo Health and Social Assistance Association to pick up and bring to his family.

“We didn’t see any injuries on the face but there were dark bruises on the ribs and back,” the source said.

“He was a jolly, easy-going man and had a lot of friends. When they heard his news, they were all shocked.”

Aye Kyaw was a member of the Upper Myanmar Photography Association. Credit: Hay Marn
Aye Kyaw was a member of the Upper Myanmar Photography Association. Credit: Hay Marn

Documenting a coup

Aye Kyaw, who was a member of the Upper Myanmar Photography Association, was known for documenting protests and other anti-junta activities in the aftermath of the military’s Feb. 1, 2021 coup. He would post his photography to social media, where it was regularly shared by politicians and the local media.

Members of Aye Kyaw’s photography group on Monday expressed sadness over his death, which is the latest of 137 that have occurred within days of detention or during interrogation by authorities since the coup, according to RFA’s count.

A resident of Sagaing, who did not want to be named for security reasons, said people in the city are “living in fear” because of incidents such as Aye Kyaw’s death in custody.

“I worked with Aye Kyaw during the protests in Sagaing and we took photos together. I feel horrible,” he said.

The resident said that Aye Kyaw’s body showed no signs of external injuries, leading him to believe that his fellow photographer died “due to extreme torture.”

“What happens here in Sagaing is that we see arbitrary arrests and killings when a military column comes and finds something they don‘t like,” he said.

“There is no law. The law comes from the barrel of the gun. They do whatever they want. We feel like the death penalty has been delivered whenever the army columns approach.”

The resident said that Aye Kyaw’s case marks the first time in Sagaing that a person has died within hours of being arrested by the junta.

Calls by RFA to junta Deputy Information Minister Maj. Gen. Zaw Min Tun and the spokesman for Sagaing Region Social Affairs Minister Aye Hlaing went unanswered Monday.

According to Bangkok-based NGO Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, junta forces have killed at least 2,142 civilians since the coup and arrested nearly 15,000, mostly during peaceful anti-junta protests.

Translated by Khin Maung Nyane. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.