11 April 2018
Relisten: A lonesome voice from Myanmar
On March 20 we talked about the ongoing Rohingya crisis with Burmese political activist Khin Zaw Win. What needs to be done? Relisten the entire debate here.

It is one of the biggest crises of this moment: the situation of the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh and the ongoing ethnic cleansing in Myanmar. Even UN observers, humanitarian workers and journalists have no answer to this problem. Khin Zaw Win is one of the few who still dares to speak out at the moment, in the toxic political climate of Myanmar. On the 20th of March we talked with him during A lonesome voice from Myanmar. Listen to this debate below.