Al Jazeera
by Joshua Carroll
Yangon, Myanmar - When Liam Mahony travelled to Myanmar to advise the United Nations on its handling of the Rohingya crisis, the dozens of aid workers he spoke to were almost unanimous in their appraisal of the organisation's approach.
Their view, the researcher recalls, was "this was all screwed up... this was not going to help the Rohingya population".
by Joshua Carroll
A Rohingya refugee and her children wade ashore after crossing the Bangladesh-Myanmar border by boat in September 2017 [File: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]
Yangon, Myanmar - When Liam Mahony travelled to Myanmar to advise the United Nations on its handling of the Rohingya crisis, the dozens of aid workers he spoke to were almost unanimous in their appraisal of the organisation's approach.
Their view, the researcher recalls, was "this was all screwed up... this was not going to help the Rohingya population".