Myanmar: The Hidden Truth
Justin Rowlatt reveals how the Rohingya population has been isolated and weakened, and shows that attacks were part of a highly planned and organised operation.
In August 2017, 11-year-old Monzur Ali saw things no child should ever see. Military helicopters landed on the football pitch in his village in Northern Rakhine in Myanmar. 'We didn't really want to leave my village, but there was a lot of shooting. Some people were hanged from trees and shot. The dead bodies were left hanging', Monzur told Panorama. He and his family fled the country and are now living across the border in a giant refugee camp in Bangladesh.
Like Monzur, hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have fled Myanmar in 2017 to escape being killed, raped and abused by security forces and local Buddhists. It has been described by the UN as a textbook example of ethnic cleansing, but could it amount to genocide? Using powerful eyewitness testimony, government documents and previously unseen footage, reporter Justin Rowlatt reveals how the Rohingya population has been isolated and weakened, and shows that attacks were part of a highly planned and organised operation.
Last on
More episodes
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Reporter | Justin Rowlatt |
Director | Alys Cummings |
Producer | Alys Cummings |
Executive Producer | Diana Martin |
Editor | Rachel Jupp |
Broadcasts
- Mon 18 Dec 2017 19:30Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ One except Scotland & Scotland HD
- Mon 18 Dec 2017 22:45Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ One Scotland HD & Scotland only
- Sat 23 Dec 2017 00:40
Explore the wider challenges that people with a learning disability face in society, and how this impacts on their health
Find out more with The Open University.