TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「It was exactly two years ago, on Aug. 25, 2017, when the Rohingya—a majority-Muslim ethnic group from ­majority-Buddhist Myanmar’s western­most state of Rakhine—began to flee to #Bangladesh in large numbers, after the #Myanmar army began a systematic campaign of arson, rape and murder that the @unitednations has called genocidal. Earlier this year, TIME's Feliz Solomon and James Nachtwey reported from the camps, where conditions remain abysmal, in Cox’s Bazar. Most #refugees live in small shacks made of bamboo and tarpaulin sheets, so tightly packed together that they can hear their neighbors talking. Things already looked bleak for the #Rohingya. Since they were stripped of Burmese citizenship in 1982, they lost everything they had in a steady erosion of rights punctuated by sporadic outbursts of horrific state-­sanctioned violence. They now find themselves sequestered in the smallest possible physical space with nowhere left to go. Bangladesh, which generously let them in, doesn’t want them to stay. In this photograph, a woman grieves for Fatema Begum, 60, in the hut of the deceased in April. Read more, and see more pictures, at the link in bio. Photograph by @jamesnachtwey for TIME」8月26日 6時04分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月26日 06時04分


It was exactly two years ago, on Aug. 25, 2017, when the Rohingya—a majority-Muslim ethnic group from ­majority-Buddhist Myanmar’s western­most state of Rakhine—began to flee to #Bangladesh in large numbers, after the #Myanmar army began a systematic campaign of arson, rape and murder that the @unitednations has called genocidal. Earlier this year, TIME's Feliz Solomon and James Nachtwey reported from the camps, where conditions remain abysmal, in Cox’s Bazar. Most #refugees live in small shacks made of bamboo and tarpaulin sheets, so tightly packed together that they can hear their neighbors talking. Things already looked bleak for the #Rohingya. Since they were stripped of Burmese citizenship in 1982, they lost everything they had in a steady erosion of rights punctuated by sporadic outbursts of horrific state-­sanctioned violence. They now find themselves sequestered in the smallest possible physical space with nowhere left to go. Bangladesh, which generously let them in, doesn’t want them to stay. In this photograph, a woman grieves for Fatema Begum, 60, in the hut of the deceased in April. Read more, and see more pictures, at the link in bio. Photograph by @jamesnachtwey for TIME


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