Women Journalists in Myanmar Push Against the Glass Ceiling
Thu Thu Hlaing is excited about developing a marketing strategy for Khayae FM, Myanmar’s first pilot community radio station in Htandapin, the outskirts of Yangon.
Read moreThu Thu Hlaing is excited about developing a marketing strategy for Khayae FM, Myanmar’s first pilot community radio station in Htandapin, the outskirts of Yangon.
Read moreViewers get a glimpse into the life and struggles of the marginalised people living in Ukhiya through the diverse captures displayed by the participants
A total 67 photographs were on display at the exhibition, titled Building Peace : Youth in Cox’s Bazar Explore Diversity.” The photos expressed the stories and reality of the Rohingya and those who are hosting them
Since 2017, more than 740,000 Rohingya, a Muslim minority ethnic group in predominantly Buddhist Myanmar, have fled to Bangladesh because of extreme violence in their home communities.
Bangladeshi and Rohingya youth were trained on visual storytelling at the five-day camp
Philippines-based journalist Fatima Arkin, the recipient of a 2016 grant from Internews’ Earth Journalism Network, was recognized as the best young environmental journalist of the year at the Asian Environmental Journalism Awards (AEJA) held last month in Singapore.
Young storytellers use photography to share their migration experiences
Minority Rohingya refugees have fled violence and persecution in Myanmar, only to live in an uneasy peace with the Bangladeshi host community. Rumors fly constantly in both communities.
A new report analyzes the transition the news media sector in Myanmar is undergoing since the political reforms that began in 2010.