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A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house... Editorial
Weather In India
17 Mar 2025 · Bhubaneswar, India
#12169647
A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house...

#12169647

17 Mar 2025

A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house in Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India, on march 17, 2025. Various protestors, including students and new job aspirants, gather in front of the state assembly house as they seek to address their requirements from the government. This has become a common issue in the state capital during the state government's budget session.


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A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house... Editorial
Weather In India
17 Mar 2025 · Bhubaneswar, India
#12169660
A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house...

#12169660

17 Mar 2025

A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house in Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India, on march 17, 2025. Various protestors, including students and new job aspirants, gather in front of the state assembly house as they seek to address their requirements from the government. This has become a common issue in the state capital during the state government's budget session.


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A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house... Editorial
Weather In India
17 Mar 2025 · Bhubaneswar, India
#12169668
A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house...

#12169668

17 Mar 2025

A woman vendor stands on the wayside footpath as protestors demonstrate to fulfill their demands in front of the Odisha state assembly house in Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India, on march 17, 2025. Various protestors, including students and new job aspirants, gather in front of the state assembly house as they seek to address their requirements from the government. This has become a common issue in the state capital during the state government's budget session.


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A child refills plastic bottles to sale to launch passengers at a low price beside the Buriganga river in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Saturday, Mar... Editorial
Daily Life In Dhaka
18 Mar 2023 · Dhaka, Bangladesh
#9765840
A child refills plastic bottles to sale to launch passengers at a low price beside the Buriganga river in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Saturday, Mar...

#9765840

18 Mar 2023

A child refills plastic bottles to sale to launch passengers at a low price beside the Buriganga river in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Saturday, March 18, 2023. The safe drinking water crisis has become one of the major and common problems nowadays in Bangladesh, especially in Dhaka city.


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A child refills plastic bottles to sale to launch passengers at a low price beside the Buriganga river in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Saturday, Mar... Editorial
Daily Life In Dhaka
18 Mar 2023 · Dhaka, Bangladesh
#9765842
A child refills plastic bottles to sale to launch passengers at a low price beside the Buriganga river in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Saturday, Mar...

#9765842

18 Mar 2023

A child refills plastic bottles to sale to launch passengers at a low price beside the Buriganga river in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Saturday, March 18, 2023. The safe drinking water crisis has become one of the major and common problems nowadays in Bangladesh, especially in Dhaka city.


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Protective face masks are seen in a car in the Old Town of Krakow as the government announces new thither restrictions among highest since t... Editorial
New Coronavirus Restrictions In Poland
25 Mar 2021 · Krakow, Poland
#6557662
Protective face masks are seen in a car in the Old Town of Krakow as the government announces new thither restrictions among highest since t...

#6557662

25 Mar 2021

Protective face masks are seen in a car in the Old Town of Krakow as the government announces new thither restrictions among highest since the beginning of the pandemic number of Covid-19 cases in Poland on March 25, 2021. Protective masks are now our daily basic routine.


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A Rahingya refugee boy trying to protect his makeshift home from the rain in Kutupalong newly expanded camp on March 6, 2017 in Cox's Bazar,... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918804
A Rahingya refugee boy trying to protect his makeshift home from the rain in Kutupalong newly expanded camp on March 6, 2017 in Cox's Bazar,...

#1918804

27 Apr 2017

A Rahingya refugee boy trying to protect his makeshift home from the rain in Kutupalong newly expanded camp on March 6, 2017 in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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A Rohingya woman who fled from recent violence toward Muslims in Myanmar stands at her new shelter in Kutupalong Rohingya refugee camp, Cox’... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918806
A Rohingya woman who fled from recent violence toward Muslims in Myanmar stands at her new shelter in Kutupalong Rohingya refugee camp, Cox’...

#1918806

27 Apr 2017

A Rohingya woman who fled from recent violence toward Muslims in Myanmar stands at her new shelter in Kutupalong Rohingya refugee camp, Cox’s bazar. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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A Rohingya child, Mariom, 3, suffers from malnutrition at Kutupalong Refugee Camp.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Mya... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918810
A Rohingya child, Mariom, 3, suffers from malnutrition at Kutupalong Refugee Camp.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Mya...

#1918810

27 Apr 2017

A Rohingya child, Mariom, 3, suffers from malnutrition at Kutupalong Refugee Camp. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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A Rohingya woman cooks food outside her makeshift home in Kutupalong newly expanded Refugee Camp.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims hav... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918813
A Rohingya woman cooks food outside her makeshift home in Kutupalong newly expanded Refugee Camp.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims hav...

#1918813

27 Apr 2017

A Rohingya woman cooks food outside her makeshift home in Kutupalong newly expanded Refugee Camp. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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A Rohingya woman with her four children who recently fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh have taken shelter in Kutupalong refugee camp and go to... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918814
A Rohingya woman with her four children who recently fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh have taken shelter in Kutupalong refugee camp and go to...

#1918814

27 Apr 2017

A Rohingya woman with her four children who recently fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh have taken shelter in Kutupalong refugee camp and go to collect food aid. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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A Rohingya refugee woman makes new shelter in Kutupalong refugee camp.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bang... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918815
A Rohingya refugee woman makes new shelter in Kutupalong refugee camp.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bang...

#1918815

27 Apr 2017

A Rohingya refugee woman makes new shelter in Kutupalong refugee camp. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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A Rohingya woman and her husband build their makeshift house.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh si... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918816
A Rohingya woman and her husband build their makeshift house.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh si...

#1918816

27 Apr 2017

A Rohingya woman and her husband build their makeshift house. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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Rohingya children from Myanmar take their baths in Kutupalong cam.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Banglade... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918817
Rohingya children from Myanmar take their baths in Kutupalong cam.  Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Banglade...

#1918817

27 Apr 2017

Rohingya children from Myanmar take their baths in Kutupalong cam. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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Rohingya refugee children attend an open air Arabic school in Kutupalang newly expanded Refugee Camp, where they learn to read the Quran.  A... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918818
Rohingya refugee children attend an open air Arabic school in Kutupalang newly expanded Refugee Camp, where they learn to read the Quran.  A...

#1918818

27 Apr 2017

Rohingya refugee children attend an open air Arabic school in Kutupalang newly expanded Refugee Camp, where they learn to read the Quran. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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Rohingya women who fled from violence in Myanmar wash clothes in Kutupalong refugee cam, cox’s bazar. They always wear hijab when go outside... Editorial
The Rohingyas: A People Without A Home
27 Apr 2017 · Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
#1918819
Rohingya women who fled from violence in Myanmar wash clothes in Kutupalong refugee cam, cox’s bazar. They always wear hijab when go outside...

#1918819

27 Apr 2017

Rohingya women who fled from violence in Myanmar wash clothes in Kutupalong refugee cam, cox’s bazar. They always wear hijab when go outside to work. Approximately 70,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since October 9, 2016 after the Burmese military launched clearance operations. The U.N. human rights office said in their report that Myanmar's security forces have committed mass killings, torture and gang rapes of Rohingyas, as well as burned their villages. Rohingyas began to flee from military oppression—first in 1978 and then again in 1991-92—in major influxes of some 500,000 people. Presently, around 32,000 registered refugees stay in the UNHCR-run camps in Cox’s Bazar, while another estimated 500,000 unregistered live outside the camps. Consequently, most of the unregistered refugees are deemed underprivileged according to the scale of basic human rights. The Bangladeshi government has accommodated the Rohingyas to a certain point, but considering limited resources as well as the poor conditions its own population lives under, it is hardly in a position to resolve the issue on its own. The Rohingya refugee issue has been a long-standing problem and, unfortunately, the international community has remained mostly mute, unwilling to play a role in helping to resolve the problem. More than 35 years since it began, the Rohingyas' crisis is long overdue for a solution.


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