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Showing posts from August, 2019

Rohingya rally to mark 'Genocide Day' in Bangladesh amps

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"Genocide Remembrance Day", Today 2 years, the world watched more than 1 million Rohingya being persecuted and murdered. The issue is now global but the genocidal Myanmar Military still commits it.There is still time to solve this issues by taking immediate action on Myanmar military. “There will not be justice without accountability.” (Rohingya Refugee Protest in Bangladesh on “Rohingya Genocide Remembrance Day.” Photos Credit: Mayyu Ali) #SaveRohingyaNow #DemandForJustice #RememberRohingya! #NeverAgainGenocide #ProtectRohingya #RohingyaAreHuman #Arakan #Burma #Bangladesh #Refugee #MyanmarGeneralsToICC #StandWithRohingya #RohingyaCrisis #MyanmarGenocide #NeverAgain

My interview with Spanish brother Jose Ernesto, the blog The Compass of the Birds!

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Few of the answer I have written here in English: JE- Your life has been a very difficult one, refugee in three countries, your father abandoned your family when you were a child, your family was persecuted by the Bangladeshi authorities for their activism, they went through hunger strikes and an attempted forced repatriation among other situations, how within all these difficulties did you manage to be a high average student and stand out among the other children and young Rohingyas in Bangladesh? Ans: Despite all the suffering and difficulties, I believe human rights is for human. I have to speak up for my rights and to educate people about rohingya refugee crisis. Refugee should be powerful and inspiration to others. In ASEAN countries, they haven’t signed according to UN refugee convention 1951. "Activism is an weapon against fear and disappear," That forced me to speak up, why they are ignoring refugee rights, why they are wasting our lives. They need to underst

A survivors’ story

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By  ADAM BEMMA ,  THE 2017 Rohingya humanitarian crisis caused by Myanmar is not only affecting Bangladesh – which has taken in 740,000 refugees – but it’s also causing strife in Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand. Despite Myanmar’s alleged attempts at repatriation, the Rohingya people have stayed put in camps and cities fearing the security situation in their villages and towns of Rakhine state. More Rohingya are returning to the seas, retracing the migration route of the 2015 Rohingya refugee crisis from ports in Myanmar and Bangladesh across the Andaman Sea to the Strait of Malacca. Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo mentioned the need to end the Rohingya refugee crisis and begin voluntary repatriation to Myanmar, at the recent Association of South-East Asian Nations (Asean) Summit in Bangkok. Rohingya Ziaur Rahman – a married father of two – has lived in his adopted city of Kuala Lumpur for the last six years. But his story of displacement and asylum refl