@adamjdean photographed a Rohingya child in her family’s tent in the Kutupalong refugee camp in Bangladesh, which now ranks as the world’s largest. Nearly 700,000 #Rohingya Muslims have fled for Bangladesh over the past 5 months. They are victims of real atrocities. @doctorswithoutborders estimates that 6,700 Rohingya met violent deaths in a single month last year. But with the Myanmar government restricting access to the area where the Rohingya once lived, even refusing to let top @unitednations officials into the country, it’s impossible for investigators and journalists to gather firsthand evidence of atrocities. Hannah Beech, @nytimes’s Southeast Asia bureau chief, recently interviewed 4 young sisters at a Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh. “Within an hour, I had a notebook filled with the kind of quotes that pull at heartstrings,” she writes. Little of it, however, was true. Hannah explains that in any refugee camp, tragedy is commodified; aid groups want to help the neediest cases, and people quickly realize which types of stories hold the most value. “But false narratives devalue the genuine horrors — murder, rape and mass burnings of villages — that have been inflicted upon the Rohingya by Myanmar’s security forces,” Hannah writes. “And such embellished tales only buttress the Myanmar government’s contention that what is happening in Rakhine State is not ethnic cleansing, as the international community suggests, but trickery by foreign invaders.” Visit the link in our profile to read more.

nytimesさん(@nytimes)が投稿した動画 -

ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 2月2日 23時25分


@adamjdean photographed a Rohingya child in her family’s tent in the Kutupalong refugee camp in Bangladesh, which now ranks as the world’s largest. Nearly 700,000 #Rohingya Muslims have fled for Bangladesh over the past 5 months. They are victims of real atrocities. @doctorswithoutborders estimates that 6,700 Rohingya met violent deaths in a single month last year. But with the Myanmar government restricting access to the area where the Rohingya once lived, even refusing to let top @unitednations officials into the country, it’s impossible for investigators and journalists to gather firsthand evidence of atrocities. Hannah Beech, @ニューヨーク・タイムズ’s Southeast Asia bureau chief, recently interviewed 4 young sisters at a Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh. “Within an hour, I had a notebook filled with the kind of quotes that pull at heartstrings,” she writes. Little of it, however, was true. Hannah explains that in any refugee camp, tragedy is commodified; aid groups want to help the neediest cases, and people quickly realize which types of stories hold the most value. “But false narratives devalue the genuine horrors — murder, rape and mass burnings of villages — that have been inflicted upon the Rohingya by Myanmar’s security forces,” Hannah writes. “And such embellished tales only buttress the Myanmar government’s contention that what is happening in Rakhine State is not ethnic cleansing, as the international community suggests, but trickery by foreign invaders.” Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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