Rohingya
Facebook hired outside group to investigate its role in spreading hate speech in Myanmar
Facebook and WhatsApp have been accused by the U.N. of spreading hate speech that led to ethnic violence against the Rohingya minority.
Two Reuters journalists in Myanmar face prison for reporting on the Rohingya slaughter
“Although we are charged, we are not guilty.”
A Rohingya Refugee Crossed Two International Borders With His High School Sweetheart
For Abdullah, India was the land of religious brotherhood, Bollywood, and Divya Bharti.
'I've Seen Everything': The Doctor Helping Refugee Women Survive Trauma
Dr. Fatema Akter is no ordinary physician. In the refugee camps of Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, she sees up to 80 patients a day—many of whom have suffered horrific persecution.
Rohingya militants massacred Hindu villagers, sparing only those who converted to Islam
"We were told not to look at them. They had knives. They also had some spades and iron rods."
We Met the Australians Trying to Prosecute Aung San Suu Kyi For War Crimes
As Myanmar's state counsellor, the lawyers allege she's directly responsible for more than one million Rohingya people fleeing the country.
The VICE Morning Bulletin
Stephen Hawking dead at 76, Democrat leads in deep-red Pennsylvania district, Trump wants militarized "space force," and more.
Facebook Posts ‘Substantively Contributed’ to Myanmar Genocide, UN Investigators Say
At a press briefing, United Nations investigators looking into the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar cited social media posts on Facebook as playing a significant role in spreading hate.
Facebook fueled violence and hatred in Rohingya crisis, UN investigators say
“I’m afraid that Facebook has now turned into a beast, and not what it originally intended.”
Facebook Posts ‘Substantively Contributed’ to Myanmar Genocide, UN Investigators Say
At a press briefing, United Nations investigators looking into the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar cited social media posts on Facebook as playing a significant role in spreading hate.
Myanmar is building military bases on Rohingya villages it burned to the ground
700,000 Rohingya have been forced out of Myanmar military forces.
Myanmar is now killing Rohingya through “forced starvation,” says the U.N.
The bulldozing of mass graves showed a “deliberate attempt by the authorities to destroy evidence of potential international crimes."