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Rohingya Broadcast


Rohingya Broadcast
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Rohingya Broadcast Rohingya “Lifeline” radio - Friday, September 04 2020 MC & News: Sami Ahmed & Mohammed Hussain \\arsenic\netexchange$\Bangla\MP3 ROH Lifeline 09042020 1130 UTC Intro Today: Friday, September 04 , 2020 7:30 a.m. (Washington, D.C., USA) News Headlines Duration: 8 minutes · Rohingya arrested at sea, shunted back to Myanmar camps · Rohingya Activist, Mr. Tun Khin's Oral statement in Rohingya · Concerned neo-hippies and their global warming, i'll tell ya · Saudi Arabia opens airspace for Israel-UAE flights 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: 7:17 minutes Translator: Mohammed Idris Abdullah (Cox’s Bazar) Topic: Reaction of the Rohingya about restoration of 3G, 4G internet in the Rohingya migrant camps of Cox’s Bazar. Translation Summary: Now twenty years old Mohammed Jahangir said that he was the student of standard ten at Buthidaung high school during Myanmar’s Army operation in 2017 but could not sit for examination and needed to escape the persecution. Jahangir said that he lives at Chakmarkul camp#21 with his parents where he is deprived of his study since he came from Myanmar, Arakan to the Bangladesh Rohingya Refugee migrants camp. Kaw Win said that he was 14 years old when he left his village tract Taray Kundang of Maungdaw township to Bangladesh refugee camp with his parents during the NASAKA operation of 1992. 42 years old Kaw Win said that he has been living with his parents and family in the Naya Para Registered Rohingya Refugee Camp of Bangladesh since 1992. Kaw Win said that they felt crippled during the one year’s internet ban in the Rohingya Refugee migrant camp of Cox’s Bazar. A Rohingya Imam namely Mohammed Sultan said that he is from Porung Chaung of Buthidaung and left his country to escape the persecution of Myanmar military government on November 22,2017 and now lives with his family. at camp# 04 of Cox’s Bazar migrant camp. Sultan said now that internet has been restored in the migrant camp he feels good because Rohingyas are able to communicate and contact regularly with their relatives in Arakan, Myanmar. Besides Sultan said that they are now able to communicate with different media as well as VOA-Rohingya lifeline Program and able to give and take day to day Rohingya related news. He thanks to the government of Bangladesh. Report: VOA News Related item code: 9-P Duration: 9:55 minutes Interviewer: Hamid Hussain (VOA Rohingya Lifeline reporter) Guest: MOHAMMAD JUNAID, A Rohingya Youth and Student at University of Technology Sydney (UTS). Topic: Discrimination in Education for Rohingya in Myanmar and Right to Educational Opportunities in Resettlements Countries. Translation Summary: Junaid told VOA Rohingya Lifeline that I am glad and grateful to VOA that I got the chance to share my student life experiences back in Myanmar and education opportunity in Australia. I was born and grew up in Kyauktaw, a town in the northern Rakhine State of Myanmar, which a place surrounding majority Buddhist Rakhine people and a very small number of Rohingya population , not like Maung Daw, Buthidaung townships where is a majority Rohingya population. There is no harmony between two communities in Kyautaw and Rohingya Muslims always fear attacks by local Buddhist Rakhine, Back in Myanmar I have never ever enjoyed the right to equal education and being a Rohingya Muslim always faced discrimination, harassment and bullying by classmates at school. In Australia, there is no discrimination in terms of religion, race, color, and country of origin but they always give priority to your talent, effort, and skill. The Australian government will support you If you wish to keep moving forward, opening new doors, and doing new things like community development. Back in Myanmar, there is very hard to

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