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Now, the nearly 700,000 Rohingya people who have fled the military-led violence in Myanmar to neighboring Bangladesh face an uncertain future.
The Rohingya were driven from Myanmar. Now they’re taking up arms to fight back - SPECIAL REPORT: In the heart of the world’s largest refugee camp, whispers of resistance grow louder as young ...
Sahat Zia Hero Since 2017, the Rohingya people from Myanmar have been fleeing anti-Muslim persecution in their predominantly Buddhist country. Most have fled to neighboring Bangladesh, where many ...
"The people living in the Rakhine state are Bengali." And even Pope Francis, during his recent visit to Myanmar, refrained from saying the name "Rohingya" out loud during a speech.
Since 2017, the Rohingya people from Myanmar have been fleeing anti-Muslim persecution in their predominantly Buddhist country. Most have fled to neighboring Bangladesh, where many now live in ...
The international community must reverse cuts to humanitarian aid for the Rohingya and work with Dhaka authorities to improve conditions in refugee camps, a new study says. The work is published in ...
Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya people fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh after a brutal military campaign of killing five years ago. Dr. Mohsina Chaklader has been visiting the now infamous ...
Five years ago, on Aug. 25, 2017, the Myanmar military poured into Rakhine State where my people, the Rohingya, have lived for generations. Over the course of a few weeks, soldiers murdered, raped ...
Hundreds of those people are believed to be Rohingya, the ethnic Muslim minority in Myanmar who for decades have faced discrimination and persecution in the majority-Buddhist country.
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.
Rohingya refugees at a camp near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, on Aug. 25. (Rafiqur Rahman/Reuters) TWO YEARS ago, Myanmar’s military launched a crackdown of fire and violence against the Muslim ...
The Rohingya people in Arakan don’t have food, security or health care. The hospitals are all closed. [In June], MSF [Doctors Without Borders] withdrew their activities from that area.