-
Cem Ozdemir, Germany's Turkish-heritage political star
-
Thousands march for women's rights and against Mideast war
-
India crush New Zealand to win third T20 World Cup title
-
Pixar's 'Hoppers' jumps to top of N. America box office
-
Trump says new Iran leader won't last long without his approval
-
American Lamperti edges Paris-Nice opener
-
Hecking tasked with saving freefalling Wolfsburg after Bauer sacked
-
Lens close in on PSG with win over lowly Metz
-
Possible terror motive in US embassy blast, say Norway police
-
Israel strikes Beirut hotel as Lebanon says war toll nears 400
-
Port Vale stun Sunderland, Southampton beat Fulham in FA Cup shocks
-
India pile up 255-5 against New Zealand in T20 World Cup final
-
US says it will not hit Iran energy sector
-
Villarreal down Elche to stay on Atletico's tail
-
Iran prepares to name new leader as Tehran fuel dumps burn
-
Southampton shock Fulham to reach FA Cup quarter-finals
-
Colombian right wing eyes comeback as country votes
-
McGrath earns cathartic World Cup slalom win after Olympic pain
-
Japan edge Australia to reach World Baseball Classic quarter-finals
-
Tehran plunged into darkness by smoke from burning oil
-
Norway police says possible terror motive in US embassy blast
-
Curtoni ends World Cup drought with Val di Fassa super-G win
-
Iran sing national anthem before bowing out of Women's Asian Cup
-
How have Scotland turned it around in the Six Nations?
-
'Relieved' Rahm wins LIV Golf event in Hong Kong
-
Silent Italy to remain 'humble' after historic England win
-
South Korea's Lee wins on LPGA Tour for first time since 2017
-
Wolfsburg fire coach Bauer with relegation looming
-
Explosion rocks US embassy in Oslo, police hunt perpetrators
-
Bangladesh rations fuel as Mideast war deepens energy crunch
-
Iran players salute and sing national anthem at Women's Asian Cup
-
New hunt for flight MH370 ends with no clues to 12-year mystery
-
Kuwait airport, Bahrain desalination unit struck as Iran presses Gulf attacks
-
F1 world champion Norris fears 'long, tough season'
-
Russell takes pop at rival Norris over 'worst F1 cars' claim
-
'Whole country will stop' as India dreams of home World Cup glory
-
Leclerc 'positively surprised' by Ferrari but says more work needed
-
Djokovic says Alcaraz equipped to extend winning streak
-
Russell warns that Mercedes must raise game despite Australia 1-2
-
China FM urges US to manage differences in face of trade woes
-
Sri Lanka hospital releases 22 rescued from torpedoed Iranian vessel
-
Piastri takes blame for crashing out before home Australian Grand Prix
-
Turkey's jailed mayor says demand for change cannot be stopped
-
Venezuela frees more political prisoners under amnesty law
-
Dominant Russell wins Australian Grand Prix in Mercedes 1-2
-
Alcaraz cruises into Indian Wells third round, Djokovic fights through
-
Iran says can fight for months as Israel strikes Beirut hotel
-
Sri Lanka hospital releases 22 rescued Iranian sailors
-
Andreeva powers into Indian Wells third round with 6-0, 6-0 rout
-
USA rout Britain after nervy start in World Baseball Classic
Rohingya refugees mark fifth 'Genocide Remembrance Day'
Thousands of Rohingya refugees held "Genocide Remembrance Day" rallies on Thursday across a huge network of camps in Bangladesh, marking five years since fleeing a military offensive in Myanmar.
In August 2017 around 750,000 of the mostly Muslim minority streamed over the border with mainly Buddhist Myanmar to escape the onslaught, which is now the subject of a landmark genocide case at the UN's top court.
Today there are nearly a million Rohingya, half of them under 18, in rickety huts in camps where the mud lanes regularly become rivers of sewage during monsoon rains.
On Thursday thousands staged rallies in many of the camps, holding banners, shouting slogans and demanding a safe return to their home state of Rakhine in western Myanmar.
"Today is the day thousands of Rohingya were killed," young leader Maung Sawyedollah said with tears in his eyes as he led a rally in Kutupalong -- the world's largest refugee settlement.
"Only Rohingya can understand the pain of the 25th of August. Five years ago this day nearly one million Rohingya were displaced. On this day in 2017 more than 300 of our villages were burnt down to ashes," he said.
"All we want is a safe and dignified return to our homeland," said Sayed Ullah, another community leader.
"Unfortunately, our cries have fallen on deaf ears. The international community is not doing anything. Here in the camps we are languishing in tarp and bamboo shelters and barely surviving on handouts," he said.
Many shouted slogans also demanding the repeal of a 1982 law that stripped them of their citizenship in Myanmar, where they are widely seen as foreigners.
- 'A prison' -
Several attempts at repatriation have failed, with Rohingya refusing to return without security and rights guarantees.
Rohingya community leaders complain that the security situation in the Bangladeshi camps -- surrounded by barbed wire -- is also deteriorating, with at least 100 people killed in violence since 2017.
Many of the killings are blamed on a Rohingya insurgent group, as well as gangs involved in drug smuggling and human trafficking that find easy recruits among the many bored young men in the camps.
"It's a prison for the Rohingyas. The life of the Rohingyas has worsened in these five years," said one young activist, declining to give his name for fear of retaliation from Bangladeshi police.
"Rohingya shops were demolished. We need to take permission to go out of the camps to meet our relatives. We feel unsafe because of violence and the rising number of targeted killings," he said.
A survey of the refugees published by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) on Thursday showed that the camps were becoming increasingly unhygienic.
It said that 76 percent of respondents said toilets were overflowing, up from 38 percent in 2018.
Acute watery diarrhoea cases have increased by 50 percent compared to 2019 and cases of skin infections like scabies have also soared.
The UNHCR has called for more funding from the international community.
To ease overcrowding, Bangladesh authorities have relocated about 30,000 Rohingya to an island but there are worries it is prone to flooding.
"Voluntary and sustainable repatriation is the only solution to the crisis," said Bangladesh Foreign Minister A.K. Abdul Momen.
C.Meier--BTB