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Human Rights Watch accuses the victorious ethnic army of imposing “policies of oppression” on Rohingya people, including arson, pillage, and forced labor.
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Rohingya Women Carry Not Just a Story of Pain But a Plan for Change
In the Rohingya refugee communities, especially with whom I work, the progress on Sustainable Development Goal (SDG)-3 ...
Even those who manage to hold on to one of the few remaining jobs in the locked-down Rakhine State capital don’t make enough ...
While the Myanmar junta escalates its war on ethnic minorities and the world shifts its attention to Ukraine, Gaza, Israel, ...
The Rohingyas are labeled as stateless, faceless, voiceless. But they are not invisible. We just refuse to see them. The ...
The international community must reverse cuts to humanitarian aid for the Rohingya and work with Dhaka authorities to improve ...
Aid agencies are warning of starvation in war-torn Myanmar's Rakhine State, with the World Food Programme (WFP) making an ...
There is no national refugee law in India, which means that India does not legally recognise refugees or distinguish between ...
More than a million Rohingya people who took shelter here are yet to be accorded formal refugee status, although Bangladesh ...
A Rohingya Muslim man tells the story of how he escaped the squalid refugee camp in southern Bangladesh where he was born and came to the U.S. as a refugee.
An estimated 700,000 Rohingya people have fled to Bangladesh since August 2017 to escape a brutal campaign of violence by Myanmar’s military. Another 40,000 have taken refuge in parts of India. Fewer ...
Rohingya migrant girl Halima Khatun (6), who arrived in Bangladesh in October, holds a whistle and a razor blade that she uses as toys at the Shamlapur refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Dec. 1, 2017.
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