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Pablo Al-Kaalik at United Nations High Commission For Refugees (UNHCR) on Rohingya Crisis

Rohingya people are numbered around one million in Myanmar at the start of 2017 are one of the many ethnic minorities in the country. Rohingya represent the largest faith percentage in Myanmar with the majority living in Rakhine state. They have their own language and culture and say they are descendants of Arab traders and other groups who have been in the region for generations. The government of Myanmar denies the Rohingya citizenship and even excluded them from the 2014 census refusing to recognize them. The latest exodus began on 25 August 2017 after Rohingya Arsa militants launched deadly attacks on more than 30 police posts. At least 6,700 Rohingya adults including at least 730 children under the age of five were killed in the month after the violence broke out, according to Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF).

Malaysia pays Singapore S$102 8m compensation in terminated HSR project

Malaysia pays Singapore S$102.8m compensation in terminated HSR project Out-Law News | 01 Apr 2021 | 3:48 am | 1 min. read Malaysia has paid over S$102.8 million ($76.3m) in compensation to Singapore for the terminated Kuala Lumpur-Singapore high speed rail (HSR) project. The payment is to cover the costs Singapore incurred in the HSR project and for an extension of its initial two-year suspension, according to a joint statement by Singapore’s transport minister Ong Ye Kung and Malaysia’s minister in the prime minister’s department Mustapa Mohamed. Benjamin Tay of Pinsent Masons MPillay, the Singapore joint law venture between MPillay and Pinsent Masons, the law firm behind Out-Law, said: “The termination payment received by Singapore would ordinarily be considered insufficient, being less than half of the actual costs incurred by Singapore, but in the context of the geo-political backdrop, it bodes well in that it leaves the door open for future collaboratio

The Sreepur Village: New patron | Charity Today News

Here Lady Tunnicliffe tells us how she became involved with The Sreepur Village. “In the early 1990s immigration to the UK from the Indian subcontinent and Uganda was very high. I was teaching Science and Maths in a Middle school in Slough which was 96% non-white children, a small number were of Afro Caribbean origin, but the majority were from Pakistan or rural Bangladesh.  Many had recently arrived and had come to school with no or little English. “My husband was Deputy marketing director of BA at the time and volunteered me and our two sons to visit Dhaka on behalf of BA and show an interest in the orphanage which one of their cabin staff, Patricia Kerr, was involved in during stopovers and in which she had persuaded other crew members to visit.

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