US finding that Myanmar army committed genocide against Rohingya to have limited effect - The Straits Times (Singapore)

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

News Type: USIP in the News

Congress, however, will take some action based on the finding, analysts say. This is "the opening salvo in the roll-out of a wider US strategy for responding to the current situation in Myanmar that has been requested by the Senate," Ms Priscilla Clapp, a former top US diplomat in Myanmar and now a senior adviser at USIP.

Human Rights

We cannot turn away from the crisis unfolding in Myanmar - The Hill

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

By: Priscilla A. Clapp

News Type: USIP in the News

A year later, the Feb. 1, 2021, military coup in Myanmar against the popularly elected civilian government has turned into an unmitigated disaster. The increasingly brutal military response to unarmed civilian resistance has triggered mounting waves of violence, engulfing almost every township across the country in civil war. The expanding conflict has claimed thousands of lives and internally displaced over 320,000 civilians. The junta’s forces have burned entire villages, massacred aid workers, and taken the lives of nearly 1,500 civilians...

Conflict Analysis & Prevention

Attacks on Burmese Military Intensify Nationwide, Signaling a Possible Revolt - Pass Blue

Sunday, June 13, 2021

News Type: USIP in the News

From small villages to city offices, an open rebellion is steadily spreading in Burma, drawing together citizens outraged by the Feb. 1 coup that overturned a national election and crushed a popular democracy. Pro-democracy advocates inside Burma and abroad describe how defectors from the disgraced army — the hated Tatmadaw — as well as...

Conflict Analysis & Prevention

Why these reporters spent 18 months in a Burmese jail - PBS NewsHour

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

News Type: USIP in the News

After nearly 18 months, two Reuters journalists have left prison in Myanmar. The crime that put them there: Revealing information the country’s government wanted to suppress, about its persecution campaign against Myanmar's Rohingya Muslim minority...

Refugees need to feel safe enough to return: UN - Daily Star

Sunday, January 21, 2018

News Type: USIP in the News

The United Nations has reiterated its call for voluntary repatriation of Rohingyas from Bangladesh saying Rohingyas need to feel that the situation is safe enough for them. “It is up for people to choose to go home. No one should choose for them. Any repatriation of Rohingyas back to Myanmar needs to be voluntary,” said Spokesman for the UN Secretary-General Stephane Dujarric in regular briefing at the UN headquarters.