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Will Myanmar Take Back Rohingya Refugees or is This The Start of a Long Process?

Will Myanmar Take Back Rohingya Refugees or is This The Start of a Long Process? Published January 20th, 2021 - 12:17 GMT Myanmar s minority rohingya people wait in a queue to receive tram at Balukhali rohingya camp, Ukhiya in Coz s Bazar Bangladesh on September 25, 2017. (Shutterstock/ File Photo) Highlights Tripartite meeting facilitated by China also agrees to keep global community in Rakhine State during repatriation. Myanmar agreed to calls by Bangladesh at a tripartite meeting facilitated by China to start the much-awaited repatriation of Rohingya in the second quarter of this year, officials said Tuesday.  Bangladesh pushed hard to begin the repatriation, but Myanmar again delayed it, seeking time for logistical arrangements.

Myanmar Agrees To Start Taking Back Rohingya This Year

Myanmar Agrees To Start Taking Back Rohingya This Year Tripartite meeting facilitated by China also agrees to keep global community in Rakhine State during repatriation. Myanmar agreed to calls by Bangladesh at a tripartite meeting facilitated by China to start the much-awaited repatriation of Rohingya in the second quarter of this year, officials said Tuesday. Bangladesh pushed hard to begin the repatriation, but Myanmar again delayed it, seeking time for logistical arrangements. We pushed to initiate the repatriation in the first quarter, but Myanmar sought more time for logistical arrangements and some physical arrangements. So we asked to start repatriation in the second quarter, and they agreed on it, Bangladesh s Foreign Secretary Masud Bin Momen said after the meeting.

Newly graduated Stempel Ph D takes on the world as a professor and researcher dedicated to bettering the lives of refugees

Florida International University Search Newly graduated Stempel Ph.D. takes on the world as a professor and researcher dedicated to bettering the lives of refugees Mitra Naseh grew up in Iran and had a first-hand view of what those fleeing neighboring war-torn Afghanistan experienced January 20, 2021 at 10:22am Mitra Naseh this month won a national award for a dissertation that presents “a multidimensional model for understanding poverty among refugees.” But the 2020 graduate of the Stempel College of Public Health & Social Work has had little time to celebrate the good news. She’s too busy. The native of Iran, who earned a bachelor’s in computer science engineering and a master’s in urban planning and development in her homeland before arriving at FIU in 2015, recently completed her first semester as an assistant professor in the school of social work at Portland State University. She is also reworking her dissertation into a series of three articles that should each

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