Rohingya Refugee News (RRN) Podcast
Rohingya Refugee News (RRN) Podcast

Rohingya Refugee News (RRN) Podcast

Shafiur Rahman

Overview
Episodes

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The Rohingya Refugee News (RRN) Podcast offers reporting, analysis, and commentary on the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar and Bangladesh. Hosted by journalist Shafiur Rahman. www.rohingyarefugee.news

Recent Episodes

What Malaysia Isn’t Asking About Rohingya Boat Deaths
NOV 20, 2025
What Malaysia Isn’t Asking About Rohingya Boat Deaths
<p><strong>New Podcast Episode</strong></p><p>This episode looks at how Malaysian media reported the recent Langkawi boat tragedy. Many headlines emphasised transnational criminal syndicates, police investigations, and cooperation with Interpol. That framing is not wrong, but it is profoundly incomplete.</p><p>The narrative shifts responsibility onto smugglers without asking how state policy contributed to the deaths.</p><p><strong>WHAT THIS EPISODE COVERS</strong></p><p>In this episode, I unpack how the New Straits Times and other Malaysian outlets report tragedies at sea by focusing on smuggler networks, criminal facilitation, and regional police coordination while avoiding basic questions like:</p><p>* <strong>Were Malaysian vessels tracking the boat before it capsized?</strong></p><p>* <strong>Did authorities delay disembarkation?</strong></p><p>* <strong>Were boats pushed back into deeper waters?</strong></p><p>* <strong>Did non-assistance contribute to deaths?</strong></p><p>These are not academic questions. In past cases, people have died after boats were refused entry or left drifting. The episode argues that focusing on “syndicates” without interrogating state roles turns a structural political crisis into a policing problem.</p><p>This allows humanitarian language to coexist with policies of deterrence.</p><p>Also, smuggling networks don’t appear out of nowhere. They exist because Rohingya cannot leave Bangladesh or Myanmar through legal routes, cannot seek asylum through formal channels, and cannot move freely inside Malaysia. When escape itself is criminalised, people pay for illegal passage because there is no alternative.</p><p><strong>HOW THIS CONNECTS TO THE MAIN ARTICLE</strong></p><p>This short episode is the immediate media analysis.</p><p>But the deeper argument - the ideological scaffolding behind this rhetoric - lives in my essay:</p><p><a target="_blank" href="https://www.rohingyarefugee.news/p/malaysia-rohinyga-boat">👉 </a><a target="_blank" href="https://www.rohingyarefugee.news/p/malaysia-rohinyga-boat"><strong>Revisiting Malaysia’s “Respectable Deportations” of the Rohingya</strong></a></p><p>That piece goes back to 2020 and CENTHRA’s call for “respectable, humane deportations,” a phrase that sounded compassionate but helped normalise refoulement and some sort of moralised removal.</p><p>(Substack will generate an automatic transcript once the audio uploads. I may replace it later with a verified manual transcript.)</p><p><p>Rohingya Refugee News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.</p></p><p></p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Rohingya Refugee News (RRN) at <a href="https://www.rohingyarefugee.news/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">www.rohingyarefugee.news/subscribe</a>
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6 MIN
The Bangladesh-Rakhine Humanitarian Corridor
MAY 15, 2025
The Bangladesh-Rakhine Humanitarian Corridor
<p><strong>What happens when a ‘humanitarian corridor’ becomes the hottest property on a regional chessboard?</strong></p><p>In this episode, journalist Shafiur Rahman dissects Bangladesh’s sudden offer to open a UN-run aid route into war‑torn Rakhine. From cyclone damage and junta blockades to cabinet flip‑flops and social‑media free‑for‑alls, he tracks how an emergency food lifeline morphed into a geopolitical tug‑of‑war.</p><p>We hear why Dhaka’s new rights‑heavy rhetoric (red line warning to Arakan Army) rings hollow while razor‑wire still cages refugees in Cox’s Bazar, how China, India and the United States read the corridor through pipeline and port lenses, and why Rohingya advocates fear being written out of the script - again. The episode closes with a blunt question: can any convoy truly relieve hunger if it leaves citizenship and justice at the checkpoint?</p><p></p><p><em>Skip ahead?</em> Chapter time-codes below let you jump straight to the politics, the geopolitics, or the Rohingya voices. </p><p><strong>01:10–02:30 Rakhine’s perfect storm</strong></p><p>War, Mocha, earthquake, famine </p><p><strong>2:30–05:05 Birth of the corridor idea</strong></p><p>Khalilur Rahman’s February soundings → 8 April reveal → UN & Fortify Rights push </p><p><strong>05:05–08:30 Dhaka’s political free-for-all </strong></p><p>Govt. framing. BNP-led backlash; Jamaat’s 24-hour “independent Arakan” bombshell; carnival of hot takes.</p><p><strong>08:30–10:50 Outlandish proposals & local concerns</strong></p><p>bdmilitary.com invasion plan, ex-pat academics, using ARSA/RSO, local media scepticism.</p><p><strong>10:50-12:25 Big-power chessboard </strong></p><p>China-pipeline anxiety, India-Kaladan worries, US vantage point, why sceptics shout “Trojan Horse.”</p><p><strong>12:25–16:20 Khalilur Rahman’s ‘red line’ for Arakan Army</strong></p><p>Govt bristles, then Khalilur Rahman’s 6 May “justice speech.”</p><p><strong>16:20–18:40 Rohingya voices & alignment</strong></p><p>Tun Khin/BROUK’s corridor line, alignment with NUG/AA, joint communiqué, demand for a seat at the table.</p><p><strong>18:40–20:55 Closing critique</strong></p><p>Corridor as potential conveyor belt; rights vs. realpolitik; warning that without citizenship guarantees, hunger relief just cements statelessness.</p><p></p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Rohingya Refugee News (RRN) at <a href="https://www.rohingyarefugee.news/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">www.rohingyarefugee.news/subscribe</a>
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21 MIN
‘Desperate and Premature’: Ambia Parveen Speaks to Shafiur Rahman on Rohingya Repatriation
APR 8, 2025
‘Desperate and Premature’: Ambia Parveen Speaks to Shafiur Rahman on Rohingya Repatriation
<p>In this episode, Shafiur Rahman speaks to Dr Ambia Parveen, Vice Chair of the European Rohingya Council, about the recent announcement by Bangladeshi and Myanmar authorities claiming that 180,000 Rohingya refugees have been cleared for return. Dr Parveen offers a sharply critical assessment of this move, calling it “political drama” rather than a serious step toward repatriation.</p><p>She condemns the premature announcement as lacking transparency, dismisses it as a “desperate” attempt by Bangladesh to seek validation, and warns of the dangers of retraumatising the Rohingya population. Her withering critique of the Bangladesh government's motives and methods is especially noteworthy, highlighting how such announcements are often staged for optics - aimed more at donors and diplomatic brownie points than genuine resolution.</p><p>This conversation also touches on the roles of the Arakan Army, the failures of past repatriation efforts, and how the entire humanitarian ecosystem - including INGOs and the UN - may be perpetuating rather than solving the crisis. Dr Parveen’s analysis is scathing, insightful, and unflinching. She suggested that solving it might threaten the structures that have grown around managing the crisis, saying: <em>“They all benefit... If you have the solution, these organisations... will not run. They need to create a conflict.”</em></p><p>Lastly, she emphasised that Rohingyas were not involved in the process, just as they hadn’t been in the past, and accused Bangladesh of hiding the truth and pushing a plan without regard for the lived realities or desires of the refugees. While expressing gratitude that Bangladesh hosted the Rohingya, she asserted that Bangladesh is “not 100% willing to solve the Rohingya crisis”, in part due to geopolitical pressures and a lack of genuine political interest in long-term solutions.</p><p><strong>Host's Note: A Broader Critique of Repatriation</strong></p><p>While Dr Ambia Parveen offers a powerful and critical account of the latest repatriation announcement, I want to add my own reflections.</p><p>Much of the mainstream discourse treats the Rohingya crisis as a failure of diplomacy or a breakdown in negotiations. But this framing obscures the deeper political economy at play — particularly in Bangladesh.</p><p>Why has the idea of repatriation been kept alive rhetorically, even when everyone knows it's unworkable given the conditions on the ground? Because it serves a set of domestic and international interests: it allows Bangladesh to externalise responsibility, maintain control through securitised camps, and attract continued humanitarian funding — all while avoiding integration or enfranchisement of the Rohingya.</p><p>The 2023 “pilot repatriation project” is a case in point. Bangladesh attempted to convince Rohingya in Teknaf they were being considered for resettlement — only for them to discover they were actually listed for return. A Myanmar verification team was brought in for formal interviews, and <a target="_blank" href="https://thediplomat.com/2023/06/cash-incentives-and-coercion-the-controversial-strategy-for-rohingya-repatriation/">refugees were even offered $2000 </a>to accept repatriation. Does this look like groundwork for a viable return? It was about optics: getting a few families over the border to stage a symbolic repatriation. It was performance - to show “progress” to donors, the international community, and a domestic audience fatigued by the crisis.</p><p>In this context, repatriation itself becomes spectacle. Each round of talks, each list of “verified” returnees, is a performance. The camps, meanwhile, are not neutral humanitarian spaces but mechanisms of containment — and bargaining chips in Bangladesh’s geopolitical toolkit.</p><p>My argument in <a target="_blank" href="https://www.himalmag.com/politics/bangladesh-rohingya-refugees-myanmar-aid">Himal Southasian</a> frames the Rohingya not just as a marginalised group but as a surplus population: not needed in the formal economy, too politically risky to integrate, but too symbolically valuable to be allowed to disappear. In this light, non-repatriation is not a failure — it's policy. A strategy to keep this population economically marginal, spatially confined, and politically disenfranchised.</p><p>Equally overlooked is the vast camp economy and the NGO industrial complex. Aid infrastructures that claim to “help” often entrench dependency, discipline behaviour, and circulate resources through a tightly controlled ecosystem of UN agencies, international NGOs, Bangladeshi elites, and local contractors. Dependency and control are not accidental. They are designed outcomes. Dr Parveen shares this view in the podcast. </p><p>And finally, while the dominant narratives often strip Rohingya of political agency, they remain active subjects: speaking, resisting and refusing imposed ‘solutions’ — even under constraint. And this was especially on display after the theatrics at the Bimstec meeting in Thailand. </p><p><strong>Take home message: If you thought repatriation is stalled by circumstance - it isn’t. It’s stalled by design.</strong></p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Rohingya Refugee News (RRN) at <a href="https://www.rohingyarefugee.news/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">www.rohingyarefugee.news/subscribe</a>
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28 MIN