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Rohingya Broadcast


Rohingya Broadcast
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Rohingya Broadcast Rohingya “Lifeline” radio - Friday, October 30, 2020 MC & News: Sami Ahmed & Mohammed Hussain \\arsenic\netexchange$\Bangla\MP3 ROH Lifeline 10302020 1130 UTC Intro Today: Friday, October 30, 2020 7:30 a.m. (Washington, D.C., USA) News Headlines Duration: 7 minutes · Australia must do more to ensure Myanmar is preventing genocide against the Rohingya · 'Some Rohingyas may be sent to Bhasan Char in first week of November': Dr. AK Abdul Momen · Tunisian man beheads woman, kills two more people in Nice church · U.S. Supreme Court deals blow to Republicans in Pennsylvania, North Carolina vote-by-mail fights Shortwave: 31-meter band, 9350 kHz; 25-meter band, 11700 kHz and 12030 kHz Medium wave (AM): 1575 kHz Report: VOA News Related item code: 9-P Duration: 11:00 minutes Interviewer: Hamid Hussain (VOA Rohingya Lifeline reporter) Guest: Nasir Zakaria Executive Director of Rohingya Cultural Center Based in Chicago Topic: Many Rohingya refugees become American citizen after living in the U.S. for five consecutive years as lawful permanent residents and vote for the 2020 U.S. president election. Translation Summary: Nasir Zakaria told VOA Rohingya Lifeline that first of all, I would like to thank the Voice of America for this opportunity and interview. It is a privilege that many American Rohingya have already voted for the upcoming November 3rd, 2020 U.S. president election and especially 40 of them from Chicago community have given early vote as first time in America as a refugee becomes an American citizen after living the U.S. for five consecutive years as lawful permanent resident. Even though we were not able to enjoy including right to vote and citizenship rights in our country of Myanmar. I believe there are many Rohingya who have become U.S citizen and are voting in other states. According to my best of knowledge there are almost 12,000 Rohingya have resettled in the United State. I would like to thanks to the government of the United State of America and people of America for this wonderful opportunity. We are truly enjoying all the citizenship rights and equal rights, without any discrimination. But back in Myanmar, we faced systematic discriminations by the Burmese government. Report: VOA News Related item code: 9-P Duration: 6:30 minutes Translator: Mohammed Idris Abdullah (Cox’s Bazar) Topic: Refugees Find Help in Utah Running Club Source: https://learningenglish.voanews.com/a/refugees-find-help-in-utah-running-club-/5631456.html Translation Summary: Educators and officials in Utah have been concerned about the effects of COVID-19-related restrictions and closures on children’s education. But activists say the closures are hardest for those who were already struggling in school: local refugees and immigrants. Halima Ali is an activist for the state’s Somali refugee community. She noted that even under normal conditions, refugee children are often in need. Their parents are new to the United States, and they do not know our education system, she said. In some cases, the parents may have had little schooling, so COVID-19 made the situation worse. Ali and her family immigrated from Somalia long before the start of the coronavirus health crisis. She said it was a struggle to feel at ease in their new homeland. For many families where the parents did not receive much education, it can be even worse. This was the case for Salman Yusef, whose family immigrated to Utah in 2018. “When I came here, I didn’t know how to read and write,” he said. “And I was learning, but then COVID-19 came. And it still is hard for me to read and write.” But a local nonprofit group helped Yusef find his way, both in the classroom and as a runner. Mike and Kristi Spence launched Athletics United as a running club after they found that many refugee children needed help with their schoolwork. Their hope was to unite the c

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