SECOND EDITION
TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 2016
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Ashar 7, 1423, Ramadan 15, 1437
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Regd No DA 6238, Vol 4, No 59
Migrating to marry n Adil Sakhawat
The picture shows a recently divorced 17-year-old Rohingya girl sitting with her son. The photo has recently been taken in April this year ADIL SAKHAWAT
The persecution of the Rohingyas in Myanmar has driven Rohingya men from their homes in Rakhine state and compelled Rohingya women of marriageable age to follow suit. Speaking to the Dhaka Tribune, Rohingya women from Sittwe, Buthidaung and Maungdaw in Myanmar’s Rakhine state admitted to taking the perilous boat journey across the Bay of Bengal to Bangladesh for a chance to get married. The situation is so dire that rights activists told the Dhaka Tribune that many women volunteer to be sold off by traffickers in hope of a better life. For most, Bangladesh is a transit point, from which they sail to Malaysia to find Rohingya partners. Between January and April this year alone, as many as 100 Rohingya women have fled Myanmar to go to Malaysia, according to local estimates. “Rohingya women choose this
journey for a better life,” said Ashik Rahman, executive director of Migrant88, an NGO working with migrants and refugees in Bangladesh, Malaysia and Australia. “The living condition of Rohingyas in the Rakhine state is inhumane. So even with all the issues of discrimination and refugee problems, living in Malaysia is a dream come true for these women.” In fact, the allure of a better life seems is strong that some Rohingya women pay to get trafficked to Malaysia and sold off, Ashik told the Dhaka Tribune. The main destination for Rohingya men is Malaysia, the Middle East and Australia. “The male Rohingya population in Malaysia have been growing since the early 90s, and many Rohingyas are doing well there. It is only natural that they would want to settle down and have families of their own in their adopted homeland,” Ashik said. PAGE 2 COLUMN 1
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KILLING OF AVIJIT MURDER SUSPECT
Father: My son picked up in February
Rahman Rabbi, Dhaka, n Arifur Asaduzzaman, Satkhira and
Hedayet also produced the dead man’s national ID which matched the police photo of the deceased. Our correspondent met Mukul’s father Abul Kalam Azad at his home in Baluigaccha village Satkhira. He told the Dhaka Tribune that Mukul had been missing since last February. PAGE 4 COLUMN 1
Tauhid-Uz-Zaman, Jessore A suspected militant killed in a “gunfight” with police in Dhaka on Sunday was picked up from Jessore in February, his family has claimed. The man’s brother-in-law Hedayet Ullah who came to receive the body from Dhaka Medical College morgue yesterday revealed his real name to be 23-year-old Mukul Rana of Satkhira. So far he had been known to police as Shariful.
SEHRI & IFTAR
Ramadan 15 16 17
June 21 22 23
Sehri – 3:40 3:40
Iftar 6:52 6:52 6:53
Source: Islamic Foundation