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© Saiful Huq Omi

Exposing Statelessness: Understanding the Plight of Burma's Rohingya

Location: OSI-New York
Event Date: May 27, 2010
Event Time: 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
Speakers: Saiful Huq Omi, Maung Tun Khin, Richard Sollom, Maureen Aung-Thwin, Rupert Skilbeck

For decades, the xenophobic military junta in Burma has refused to recognize the Rohingya, a distinct Muslim ethnic minority living in western Burma, as one of the country's many ethnic nationalities. As a result the Rohingya have suffered human rights violations, and a vast majority of them have been denied official recognition of citizenship.

Using Saiful Huq Omi's photographs and the recent Physicians for Human Rights report Stateless and Starving: Persecuted Rohingya Flee Burma and Starve in Bangladesh as a point of departure, this event will explore the impact of statelessness on the Rohingya.

Panelists

This event is cosponsored by the Open Society Institute Documentary Photography Project, Burma Project/Southeast Asia Initiative, and Justice Initiative.

Saiful Huq Omi’s exhibition "The Disowned and the Denied: Stateless Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh" is part of the Moving Walls 17 photography exhibition currently on view at the Open Society Institute–New York.

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Related Information

The Rohingya
October 2009
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Nearly a quarter of a million Rohingya have fled into neighboring Bangladesh in hopes of escaping their persecution in Burma. The government of Bangladesh declared the Rohingya illegal immigrants and placed them in refugee camps.

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Ara Oshagan documents young people placed in youth detention facilities and adult prisons across California.

Moving Walls 17
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The documentary photographs in this OSI exhibition show how power can be used as an impediment to transparency, a mechanism for social control, and a tool for oppression, while also acknowledging the strength and defiance of people who suffer as a result.

Moving Walls 17: Mari Bastashevski
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Mari Bastashevski documents the people and places left behind by the abduction and murder of citizens in the Northern Caucasus that are believed to be largely the work of military and security forces.

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