He served as the editor-in-chief of
Kyemon (The Mirror), one of Burma’s most popular newspapers at that time after it was nationalized and original founder,
U Thaung, was imprisoned in 1964. In 1969, he was appointed as editor-in-chief of a State owned new daily newspaper, the
Hanthawaddy Daily in Mandalay by Ne Win’s military government. It became a successful one within a few years. But thanks to his unwillingness to compromise his editorial independence and his proclivity to run stories criticizing the regime, the paper was shut down and he was dismissed in 1978. He wrote
Search for beauty under the pen name
Paw Thit. Translations of
Northern Light and
Queed were his well-known works. He also wrote books on his tours in communist countries. His autobiography,
What is the Human Hell, was published in 2010 and described in detail of inhuman torturing and interrogation practices in prison. ==Political imprisonment==