Yin Yin Nwe | |
---|---|
ရင်ရင်နွယ် | |
Personal details | |
Born | 1952 (age 64–65) Kengtung, Shan State, Myanmar |
Nationality | Burmese |
Spouse(s) | Phyo Wai Win (divorced) |
Parents | Sao Saimong, Mi Mi Khaing |
Alma mater |
Rangoon University University of Cambridge |
Profession | University Professor Geologist UNICEF Representative to China |
Yin Yin Nwe (born c.1952) is a Burmese geologist. She has held important positions with UNICEF since 1991, and was appointed UNICEF Representative to China on 1 December 2006.
Yin Yin Nwe's father is Sao Saimong Mangrai, a member of the princely Kengtung State and a highly regarded scholar on Shan State and the Head of the Shan State Education Department during the post-Independence years. Yin Yin Nwe's mother is Daw Mi Mi Khaing, also a scholar and a former Principal of Kambawza School. Her father, Sao Saimong, had an administrative career after the Shan principalities agreed to become part of the Union of Burma, and was Chief Education Officer for Shan and Kayah States. Her mother was the author of Burmese Family, a book on Burmese culture and was one of the first women to write in English about Burmese culture and traditions. Yin Yin Nwe is of Mon ancestry on her mother's side and of Tai ancestry on her father's side, given that the state of Kengtung originated in the 13th century, when the Chiang Mai dynasty founded a new kingdom which was named Lanna, sending a prince to Kengtung to establish a separate kingdom.
Yin Yin Nwe obtained a Bachelor of Science degree from Yangon University and later finished a Doctor of Philosophy in the Earth Sciences from the University of Cambridge. She also has a Master of Science in Public Policy and Management from London University. She served for 19 years at the Geology Department of Yangon University.