DHAKA, Bangladesh
14-02-2021
A group of people shout slogans and hold placards during a Rohingya solidarity rally in front of the ICJ, The Hague, on December 11th, 2019.Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Vox
Jen Kirbyjen.kirby@vox.comThe takeover is terrible for Myanmar. It may be worse for the country’s most vulnerable.
CJ Werleman
14 January, 2021
mizzima
03 January 2021
DW
03-12.2020
Bangladesh has transferred hundreds of Rohingya refugees to Bhasan Char, a low-lying island in the Bay of Bengal prone to cyclones and floods. International aid groups complain they weren't involved in the move.
Aung San Suu Kyi's party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), is set to form a civilian government for the second time in a row following the end of Myanmar's 50-year military rule.
The NLD won by a huge margin of 396 parliamentary seats in the 8 November election against the military-aligned main opposition party the Union Solidarity of Development Party (USDP), securing a second five-year term.
In-depth: Excluded from voting and long denied citizenship, Rohingya Muslims face a precarious future in post-election Myanmar.
Co-founder at the Free Rohingya Coalition Nay San Lwin explains why Myanmar excluded more than 1.1 million Rohingya from voting in Sunday’s general election.
The future of democracy and the fate of the Rohingya refugees hangs in the balance
By RAINER PROKSCH
on November 8, 2020
Myanmar is holding its second general election on Sunday since it ended military rule. The government has cancelled voting in areas where there has been fighting between the military and ethnic armed groups. Al Jazeera's Florence Looi reports.
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