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

Thursday, July 9, 2020

Covid-19 exposed Rohingyas to hate, xenophobia: Experts

THE BUSINESS STANDARD
TBS Report
09 July, 2020

Lockdowns, economic slowdown in different countries robbed the Rohingyas of their livelihood opportunities and pushed them into an abyss of hunger 

Rohingya refugees at the Kutupalong camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh/Reuters 
 
The Covid-19 pandemic has disproportionately harmed refugees, asylum seekers and stateless people such as the Rohingyas, said speakers at an online event jointly organised by the Refugee and Migratory Movements Research Unit (RMMRU) and Free Rohingya Coalition.

The lockdowns and economic slowdown in different countries have robbed the Rohingyas of their livelihood opportunities and pushed them into an abyss of hunger and malnutrition. It has also exposed them to exploitation, hate and xenophobia, they added.

Global economic slowdown robbed Rohingyas of livelihood: Rights activists

The Financial Express
FE Online Report
July 09, 2020
The lockdowns and economic slowdown in different countries have robbed Rohingyas of their livelihood opportunities and pushed them into an abyss of hunger and malnutrition, according to rights activists.

They came up with the opinion at a virtual symposium on Thursday, organised by Refugee and Migratory Movements Research Unit (RMMRU) in collaboration of Free Rohingya Coalition.

Rohingyas facing more xenophobia amid the Covid-19 pandemic: activists

The Daily Star
July 09, 2020
Star Online Report
Rohingya refugees walk towards the Balukhali refugee camp after crossing the border in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district, on November 2, 2017. Photo: Dibyangshu Sarkar/AFP

Rohingya activists have urged the host countries to stop hatred against them and treat them as human beings, saying the refugees, who have fled genocidal acts in Myanmar, are now facing a higher level of xenophobia amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Stating that countries like Malaysia and Thailand had refused entry to Rohingyas who tried to go on their shores citing fears of coronavirus infection, they said it was not their choice to take such risky journeys but the grave rights violations back in Myanmar had forced them to do so.

Friday, July 3, 2020

Brands Declare Black Lives Matter, but Activists See a 'Double Standard' in Asia

VICE
Andrew Nachemson
July 2, 2020


Despite public shows of support for the movement for racial justice taking place around the world, some corporations have been complicit in racial violence in the world's most populous continent.

Arsenal's German defender Shkodran Mustafi (C) takes a knee to show support for the Black Lives Matter movement and as a protest against racism before kick off of an English Premier League football match on June 20, 2020. (Photo by Gareth Fuller / POOL / AFP) 


As countries around the world reckon with widespread protests against centuries of systemic racism, high-profile companies have found themselves scrambling to adjust to the new paradigm.

Some have scrubbed long-overlooked offensive mascots, while many others have used the platform afforded by major brand recognition to voice their support for the movement.

Friday, June 19, 2020

Malaysia Is Planning to Send a Boat Full of Rohingya Refugees Back Out to Sea

VICE
by Sammy Westfall
Jun 19 2020,


"Sending them back out to sea is just throwing them into a killing field."


A Rohingya refugee camp in Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh. Photo courtesy of UK DFID.




Once their damaged boat is fixed, 269 Rohingya refugees now docked in Malaysia will be sent back out to sea if officials follow through with their current plan, sparking an outcry from rights groups.

Reuters, citing two security sources, reported on Thursday that Malaysia had previously asked Bangladesh to take back the refugees, who have been detained since their June 8 arrival, but Bangladeshi officials rejected the request. The sources said authorities have drawn up plans to push the refugees back out with food and water, but “no decision has been made yet.”

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Activists championed by rights groups have history of anti-Rohingya messaging

Frontier
MYANMAR
ANDREW NACHEMSON and LUN MIN MANG
Sunday, May 24, 2020
Ko Zayar Lwin (centre left, with white rose) attends a court in Yangon with other Peacock Generation members on October 30, 2019. (Nyein Su Wai Kyaw Soe | Frontier)
 

Some prominent activists who say they stand for human rights and democracy have propagated hatred for the Rohingya, a double-standard that international watchdog groups weren’t fully aware of. 

 

Ko Zayar Lwin, 29, has become an icon in Myanmar’s activist community since his arrest in April 2019 for a Thangyat performance mocking the military. Zayar Lwin and four of his colleagues in the Peacock Generation troupe, who performed the traditional form of satirical theatre during the annual Thingyan festival, were charged with defamation and undermining the military, and face increasingly lengthy jail sentences. The plight of the young satirists has attracted international attention, even as the civilian government led by their idol State Counsellor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi has remained silent.

15,000 Rohingya under quarantine as coronavirus cases rise

Aljazeera
2May 2020


Three sections of camps in Bangladesh blocked off by authorities after confirmed infections among refugees hit


At least 15,000 Rohingya refugees are under quarantine in Bangladesh's vast camps, as the number of confirmed coronavirus infections there rose to 29.

Health experts have long warned that the virus could race through the cramped settlements, housing almost a million Rohingya who fled violence in Myanmar, and officials had restricted movement in the area in April.

Thursday, May 21, 2020

ဘဂၤလားေဒ့ရွ္ ဒုကၡသည္စခန္းမွာ ရိုဟင္ဂ်ာေတြ ဆႏၵျပ

လွတ်လပ်တဲ့အာရှအသံ ( RFA )
မြန်မာဌာန | မေးမြန်းခန်း
2016-05-21

ဘင်္ဂလားဒေ့ရှ်နိုင်ငံ၊ ကော့ဇ် ဘဇား Cox’s Bazar ခရိုင်ရှိ Nayapara နရာပယာ ဒုက္ခသည်စခန်းမှာ မြန်မာ နိုင် ငံ ရခိုင်ပြည်နယ်က သွားရောက်ခိုလှုံနေတဲ့ ရိုဟင်ဂျာမူစလင်တွေ ဒီကနေ့ ဆန္ဒပြနေကြပါတယ်။

Saturday, May 2, 2020

Scope with Waqar Rizvi | Myanmar: War crimes | Brexit: EU-UK committee meeting | Ep 244 | Indus News

NewsX.tv
International News Library
May,2,2020

Watch Waqar Rizvi conferring with a panel of experts on recent International events in the SCOPE.
Topics:
1. Myanmar: War crimes against minorities
2. Brexit: UK-EU committee discuss implementation
Guests:
Nay San Lwin – (Rohingya Activist)
Nasir Zakaria – (Rohingya Activist)
Bridget Welsh – (Researcher)
Alex de Ruyter – (Brexit Expert)
Mark Brolin – (Political Analyst)

Malaysia detains hundreds of Rohingya and migrants despite health risks

The Washington Post 
Miriam Berger
May 2, 2020
Rohingya refugees stand in line to get food April 15 in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. (Shafiqur Rahman/AP) 
 
Malaysia has rounded up and detained hundreds of undocumented migrants in what authorities said was part of an effort to maintain movement restrictions in the country and contain the coronavirus outbreak.

Human rights groups, however, criticized the arrests, which have included Rohingya refugees and children, and subsequent detentions, as the coronavirus spreads easily in such places as detention centers.

Malaysia cites Covid-19 for rounding up hundreds of migrants

The Guardian
Kaamil Ahmed and agencies
Sat 2 May 2020

In move condemned by UN, refugees including Rohingya detained amid rise in xenophobia 

Rohingya refugees wearing protective masks practise distancing while waiting to receive goods from volunteers in Kuala Lumpur. Photograph: Lim Huey Teng/Reuters 

Malaysian authorities have rounded up and detained hundreds of undocumented migrants, including Rohingya refugees, as part of efforts to contain coronavirus, officials said.

Authorities said 586 undocumented migrants were arrested in a raid in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, on Friday. Armed police walked people through the city in a single file to a detention building, according to activists. The UN said the move could push vulnerable groups into hiding and prevent them from seeking treatment.

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Free Rohingya Coalition decries pushing refugees back out to sea

The Daily Star

Star Online Report
April 29, 2020
A boat carrying suspected ethnic Rohingya migrants is seen detained in Malaysian territorial waters, in Langkawi, Malaysia on April 5, 2020. File Photo: Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency/Handout via Reuters

Pushing hundreds of starving and persecuted Rohingya refugees back out to the sea in the full knowledge that they have no safe place of refuge elsewhere are fundamental violations of their human rights, said Free Rohingya Coalition, a global network of Rohingya survivors and activists, today.

It said it is deeply troubled by the news reports that a number of Asian countries, specifically Malaysia, Thailand and Bangladesh, are pushing starving Rohingya refugees on boats back out to dangerous waters after refusing disembarkation on their shores.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

First coronavirus case confirmed in Cox's Bazar, near world's largest refugee camp

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

What will the Kingdom gain from deporting them?

The Daily Star
Nay San Lwin
March 05, 2020
Rohingya refugees walk down a hillside at the Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar on November 27, 2017. PHOTO: AFP





If you look at the major cities around the world, from New York to London, you will find the Rohingya are there. You can be sure that wherever they are, be it in Riyadh or Vancouver, they have gone by one of three routes—seeking asylum, UN agency resettlement or entry with a counterfeit passport from a third country. And so it is, that an estimated 42,000 Rohingya are in Saudi Arabia. Worryingly, they face deportation to Bangladesh.

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Free Rohingya Coalition expresses gratitude to Maldives

THE Edition
Mariyam Malsa
27 February 2020,
Free Rohingya Coalition (FRC) expressed gratitude to Maldives over the government's decision to file a written declaration of intervention at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) at The Hague in support of the persecuted Rohingya people.

Highlighting that the genocide against the Rohingya effectively began in 1978, Ro Nay san Lwin, a founder of FRC stated, "Your action today speaks louder than the countless statements about us which are issued. We thank you from the bottom of our hearts".

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Maldives hires Amal Clooney to represent Rohingya at UN

Aljazeera
2020.02.26


British-Lebanese lawyer said she is delighted to represent the Rohingya before the International Court of Justice.
The UN has described the Rohingya as the world's most persecuted people [Ann Wang/Reuters] 

The Maldives has hired the services of prominent human rights lawyer Amal Clooney to represent the persecuted Rohingya at the United Nations court.

"I am delighted to have been asked to represent the Maldives before the International Court of Justice. Accountability for genocide in Myanmar is long overdue and I look forward to working on this important effort to seek judicial remedies for Rohingya survivors," the British-Lebanese lawyer said.

Maldives hires Amal Clooney to represent Rohingya at UN

AA
Riyaz ul Khaliq 
ANKARA
26.02.2020 

Archipelago nation to intervene in Gambian case against Myanmar at International Court of Justice
 


Maldives has hired the services of prominent human rights lawyer Amal Clooney to represent the persecuted Rohingya at the UN court.

“I am delighted to have been asked to represent the Maldives before the International Court of Justice. Accountability for genocide in Myanmar is long overdue and I look forward to working on this important effort to seek judicial remedies for Rohingya survivors,” the British-Lebanese lawyer said.

Friday, February 21, 2020

Justice for Rohingyas

FRONTLINE
Haroon Habib
Dhaka , February 21, 2020
n a significant ruling, the International Court of Justice orders Myanmar to protect the minority Rohingya population from human rights atrocities, particularly genocide.

IN the absence of any meaningful global effort to hold Myanmar accountable for the continued military campaign against the Rohingya community in Rakhine State, the ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) that Myanmar should protect the Rohingyas against genocide comes as a relief to the beleaguered minority population. In November 2019, The Gambia, the West African country, filed a suit against Myanmar accusing it of systematic ethnic cleansing from October 2016 in violation of the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention. It alleged that the country was committing “an ongoing genocide against its minority Muslim Rohingya population”.

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Who are behind the illegal passports issued to Rohingyas?

dailyobserver
Wednesday, 19 February, 2020
Nizam Ahmed

Official figure of Rohingya Muslims, who fled Myanmar military crackdown with genocidal intent, in 2017 and now living in the world's largest refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, will cross 800,000 once Saudi Arabia deports around 50,000 Rohingyas to Bangladesh.

During the crackdown thousands were killed, women raped and their houses burnt to ashes. The total number of Rohingyas living at the refugee camp and many other makeshift shelters in the Cox's Bazar and the adjacent Bandarban districts has crossed 1,100,000 with those who had fled Myanmar following Muslim-Buddist communal riots in 2012.

Saudi Arabia wants to send the Rohjngyas back to Bangladesh as they entered into the Kingdom using Bangladesh passports and pretending as Bangladeshi nationals in the recent past.
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