" ယူနီကုတ်နှင့် ဖော်ဂျီ ဖောင့် နှစ်မျိုးစလုံးဖြင့် ဖတ်နိုင်အောင်( ၂၁-၀၂-၂၀၂၂ ) မှစ၍ဖတ်ရှုနိုင်ပါပြီ။ (  Microsoft Chrome ကို အသုံးပြုပါ ) "
Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 13, 2021

Bangladesh hopes Malaysia plays instrumental role to help solve Rohingya crisis

malay mail
Tuesday, 13 Apr 2021
Bangladesh High Commissioner to Malaysia Md Golam Sarwar said Malaysia was one of the countries that had immediately responded to Bangladesh’s call for assistance during the early weeks of the Rohingya crisis in 2017. — Reuters pic


KUALA LUMPUR, April 13 — Bangladesh hopes Malaysia would play an instrumental role to move the issue of Rohingya refugees forward within Asean and help Bangladesh achieve a durable solution to this crisis.

Monday, April 12, 2021

‘Come and see for yourselves’

THE Star
Sunday, 11 Apr 2021



LANGKAWI: Their 30ha settlement is a somewhat secluded neighbourhood hidden away from the iconic eagle in Kuah town and unknown to many Malaysians visiting this “touristy” island.

Friday, April 9, 2021

Malaysia says meeting with Myanmar does not ‘construe a recognition’ of junta

COCONUTS
By Coconuts KL 
Apr 8, 2021
Zahairi Baharim, far left, meets with Aung Than Oo, far right. Photo: Myanmar Politics Watch/Facebook

The Foreign Affairs Ministry said today that the recent meeting between ambassador Zahairi Baharim and a Myanmar official was not a symbol of recognition of that country’s military junta.

The ministry was addressing reactions to photos of the meeting that had been circulating online and prompting concerns that Malaysia was officially recognizing and accepting Myanmar’s military as the country’s leaders. Zahairi met with Electricity and Energy Minister Aung Than Oo at the capital of Nay Pyi Taw yesterday to discuss an offshore project involving a subsidiary of Malaysia-owned Petronas.

Thursday, April 8, 2021

Death threats and hate speech make Rohingya activist's Malaysia refuge a prison

the japan times
BY ROZANNA LATIFF AND EBRAHIM HARRIS
REUTERS
Apr 6, 2021


Rohingya refugee and activist Zafar Ahmad Abdul Ghani and his wife look out from their home in Kuala Lumpur. | REUTERS


KUALA LUMPUR – Zafar Ahmad Abdul Ghani, a Rohingya Muslim refugee and activist who fled persecution and ethnic strife in Myanmar, has called Malaysia home for nearly three decades.

Now, it’s more like a prison.

Zafar, 51, has not left his home on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur for nearly a year, after misinformation spread online that he had demanded Malaysian citizenship — triggering a wave of hate speech and death threats against him and his family.

“I’m still scared. For a year, I’ve not set foot outside. I’ve not seen the earth outside,” said the father of three.

Friday, March 19, 2021

Give peace a chance, Malaysia tells Myanmar

THE Star  

By ALLISON LAI
Friday, 19 Mar 2021


PETALING JAYA: Malaysia has called on Myanmar's ruling junta to change its course and choose a peaceful solution instead of violence against unarmed civilians.

Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin (pic) said all concerned parties should work together towards a peaceful settlement of this crisis.


"Violence begets violence, and the nation's future may be plunged into irreversible destruction.

"The military leadership in Myanmar is strongly urged to change its course, and choose a path towards peaceful solutions.

Saturday, February 27, 2021

UN experts: Toddlers as young as three among over 1,000 Myanmar nationals deported by Malaysia

MALAY MAIL
THASHA JAYAMANOGARAN
Thursday, 25 Feb 2021 
An immigration truck carrying Myanmar migrants to be deported from Malaysia is seen in Lumut February 23, 2021. — Reuters pic



KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 25 — A group of United Nations (UN) experts have called out Malaysia for deporting over 1,000 Myanmar nationals which also included minors and toddlers — including a three-year-old — despite a court order halting their return on Tuesday.

The group of experts said they were appalled by Malaysia’s action to deport vulnerable individuals as well as unaccompanied minors which could endanger their lives.

“The Malaysian authorities in defiance of the court order breached the principle of non-refoulement, a rule of jus cogens, which absolutely prohibits the collective deportation of migrants without an objective risk assessment being conducted in each individual case.

Thursday, February 18, 2021

Malaysia to Deport 1,200 Myanmar Migrants Despite Post-Coup Turmoil

Bloomberg
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
16 February 2021,


Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (AP) -- Malaysia's government will repatriate 1,200 Myanmar migrants next week despite a military coup in their home country, but has assured that they will not include minority Muslim Rohingya refugees or those registered with the U.N. refugee agency.

But the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees voiced concern Tuesday that there may be vulnerable women and children among the group. Myanmar's leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, was detained as the military seized power on Feb. 1, sparking protests in the country.

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

UNHCR cardholders and Rohingya won't be sent home, says Immigration DG

The Star
Monday, 15 Feb 2021

PETALING JAYA: No holders of United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) cards or those from the Rohingya ethnic group will be sent home in the upcoming repatriation programme, says Immigration director-general, Datuk Khairul Dzaimee Daud.

"The Immigration Department refers to various media reports regarding the repatriation programme on Feb 23 using Myanmar Navy boats.

"No holders of UNHCR cards or Rohingya will be involved in this programme. This is a part of the regular repatriation exercises carried out by Immigration depots," he said in a statement on Monday (Feb 15). 

He added that those being sent back had offences such as not having identification documents, overstaying, and improper use of travel passes.

Monday, February 8, 2021

Indonesia, Malaysia seeking ASEAN meeting on Myanmar after coup

REUTERS
By Maikel Jefriando, Stanley Widianto
February 5, 202 

JAKARTA (Reuters) - The leaders of Indonesia and Malaysia on Friday said they were seeking a special meeting of Southeast Asian nations to discuss the situation in Myanmar, where an elected government was overthrown in a coup this week. 

Throwing a wedge in Myanmar’s transition to democracy, the military took power on Monday, alleging irregularities in a November election won in a landslide by the party of Aung San Suu Kyi.

After meeting visiting Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, Indonesian President Joko Widodo said their foreign ministers had been asked to talk to Brunei, the current chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), to try to set up the special Myanmar meeting.

Muhyiddin referred to the coup as being “one step backward in the process of democracy in that country”.

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Rape of 15-year-old – Rohingya men out on bail

FMT
January 12, 2021
Shah Alam High Court judge finds no grounds to deny the two men bail.
 


SHAH ALAM: The High Court here today allowed bail for two Rohingya men who are charged with raping a 15-year-old girl.

Judicial Commissioner Norsharidah Awang ordered Mohammad Hassan Mohammad Rafik and Mohd Ali Hossain Odi Rahman to post bail of RM15,000 each with two Malaysians to stand surety.

She also ordered the two to report to the nearest police station on the first week of the month.

Norsharidah, who heard the matter by way of a revision, said she did not find in the notes of evidence of the Sessions Court judge any grounds to deny them bail. 
 

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

မေလးရွား ပရဟိတအဖြဲ႔ေတြရဲ႕ ဒုကၡသည္ကူညီေရးအစီ အစဥ္

VOA
ကိုခင္ေမာင္စိုးမင္း
08 ဒီဇင္ဘာ၊ 2020

မေလးရွားႏိုင္ငံမွာ ေရာက္ရွိေနၾကတဲ့ ႐ိုဟင္ဂ်ာအမ်ိဳးသမီးဒုကၡသည္ေတြကို ကို႐ိုနာ ကပ္ေရာဂါေတြၾကားမွာ ေဒသခံ ပရဟိတအဖြဲ႕အစည္းေတြက အဂၤလိပ္စာ နဲ႔ မေလးစာေတြသင္ၾကားေပးေနပါတယ္။ ဒီအေၾကာင္း ေအပီသတင္းကို အေျခခံၿပီး ကိုခင္ေမာင္စိုးမင္း က ေျပာျပေပးပါလိမ့္မယ္။

Link : Here

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Malaysia calls for proportionate burden and responsibility sharing to resolve Rohingya issue

malaymail 
Sunday, 15 Nov 2020 
Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin addresses the sixth night session of the 37th Asean Summit and Related Summits held virtually, November 14, 2020. — Bernama pic

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 15 — Malaysia calls for proportionate burden and responsibility sharing as underscored in the Global Compact on Refugees (GCR) to resolve the issue of the Rohingyas as its resources and capacities are already stretched, further compounded by Covid-19.

Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, in his intervention at the 11th Asean-United Nations Summit today, said Malaysia can no longer take in more refugees as the spillover effects of the crisis in Rakhine state, Myanmar, continue to affect countries in the region, including Malaysia.

Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Anti-migrant sentiment fanned on Facebook in Malaysia

REUTERS
By Rozanna Latiff, A. Ananthalakshmi
October 14, 2020
 
 
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - As coronavirus infections surged in Malaysia this year, a wave of hate speech and misinformation aimed at Rohingya Muslim refugees from Myanmar began appearing on Facebook.

FILE PHOTO: Rohingyas living in Malaysia protest against the treatment of Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims near the Myanmar embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia September 8, 2017. REUTERS/Lai Seng Sin/File Photo

Alarmed rights groups reported the material to Facebook.

But six months later, many posts targeting the Rohingya in Malaysia remain on the platform, including pages such as “Anti Rohingya Club” and “Foreigners Mar Malaysia’s Image”, although those two pages were removed after Reuters flagged them to Facebook recently.

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Terror At Sea: Migrants Tell Of 200-Day Ordeal


Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Rohingya refugees found alive on Malaysian islet after fears they had drowned

EXPRESS & STAR
Jul 27, 2020

There has been a mass exodus of Rohingya Muslims from Burma amid a military crackdown.

 Rescued Rohingya refugees on a beach on Rebak Island off the resort island of Langkawi, Malaysia (Malaysian Maritime Enforcement/AP)

Malaysian authorities said they found 26 Rohingya Muslims, including women and children, hiding on a northern islet after they were initially feared drowned after jumping off a fishing boat.

The Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency launched a search for the group after one Rohingya migrant found on the islet off the northern resort island of Langkawi told investigators that at least 24 other Rohingya were missing.

Two dozen Rohingya refugees die after jumping from boat near Thailand

MALAYSIA SUN
Voice of America
27 Jul 2020,

Monday, July 27, 2020

Malaysia finds Rohingya feared drowned hiding on island

Aljazeera
27th July 2020

Malaysia has stepped up patrols around its maritime borders as Rohingya attempt to reach the country by boat.
Malaysia has stepped up patrols in waters near Langkawi island since the start of the coronavirus pandemic [File: Olivia Harris/Reuters]

Twenty-six Rohingya refugees, who had been feared drowned while trying to swim ashore close to the Malaysian resort island of Langkawi, have been found alive, hiding in the vegetation on a nearby islet, a senior coastguard official said on Monday.

Malaysia does not recognise refugee status, but the country is a common destination for the mostly Muslim Rohingya, hundreds of thousands of whom live in densely populated camps in Bangladesh after escaping a brutal military crackdown in Myanmar in 2017.

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Malaysia: Stop Treating Rohingya Refugees as Criminals

HUMAN
RIGHTS
WATCH




July 22, 2020

Jailing, Caning Refugees Violates International Law 
A boat carries Rohingya refugees off the coast of Langkawi, Malaysia, April 5, 2020. Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency handout via AP

(Bangkok)Malaysian authorities should stop prosecuting Rohingya refugees for illegal entry and ensure that they are protected in accordance with international law, Human Rights Watch said today.

At least 40 ethnic Rohingya who were picked up from a boat that arrived in Malaysian waters more than three months ago have been sentenced to seven months in prison. Fourteen children from the boat were sent to “shelters” and may also face criminal charges. Twenty-seven of the thirty-one men convicted also face three strokes of the cane – a brutal punishment that constitutes torture under international human rights law. A court will hear their application to set aside the caning sentence on July 22.

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Welfare Dept unable to locate Rohingya girl and family

THE Star ONLINE
N. TRISHA
Tuesday, 21 Jul 2020



GEORGE TOWN: A Rohingya girl who nearly became a child bride before authorities intervened last year has disappeared from the Penang Social Welfare Department’s radar.

Department deputy director R. Chitarthany believed the girl and her family moved to Alor Setar, Kedah, last year.

“When we last visited the family on April 4 last year, we could not find them. They are said to have moved to Alor Setar.

“The case worker who made the visit said he was told by neighbours that the family had moved but did not leave their new address.

Malaysia: Stop plans to cane Rohingya refugees and release those already imprisoned


Asia and The Pacific  Refugees 

The Malaysian authorities must immediately abandon plans to whip at least 20 Rohingya men who are being punished simply for trying to seek safety. The government should release all other jailed Rohingya refugees – including women and children – who have been unlawfully singled out, convicted and imprisoned for alleged “immigration offences,” which are contrary to international law, Amnesty International said today.
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