Skip to main content

    Let the Rohingya speak

    Persecuted and oppressed, they are often forced into silence. The immense challenges of addressing their health, water, sanitation, and protection needs persist, especially for those living in the camps of Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, and beyond.

    Unfortunately, there has been little progress in addressing the root cause of the Rohingya’s suffering: their statelessness.

    Read more

    Lost At Sea
    Lost At Sea
    "Lost at Sea " is a powerful animated film produced by Doctors Without Borders/ Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and Noon Films (based in Barcelona, Spa...
    Voices from the field: Alarming hepatitis C rates inside Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh
    Voices from the field: Alarming hepatitis C rates inside Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh
    A silent epidemic rages in Cox's Bazar's vast Rohingya refugee camps. A recent Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) survey in Rohi...
    World Refugee Day 2023: #ImagineRohingya - A photo story
    World Refugee Day 2023: #ImagineRohingya - A photo story
    On this World Refugee Day 2023, Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)is launching the first episode of a monthly photo essay pictur...
    Bangladesh: 20 images show the daily lives of three Rohingya photographers
    Bangladesh: 20 images show the daily lives of three Rohingya photographers
    In 2017, Ro Yassin Abdumonab, Ishrat Bibi and Sahat Zia Hero, alongside 700,000 other Rohingyas, fled targeted campaigns of violence launched by the M...
    Rohingya: Two crows, a banyan tree, and leaving a trace for the future
    Rohingya: Two crows, a banyan tree, and leaving a trace for the future
    In the world’s largest refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières(MSF)is partnering with a Rohingya c...
    Opinion: Who will champion the Rohingya? Draconian refugee policies must end now
    Opinion: Who will champion the Rohingya? Draconian refugee policies must end now
    I have spent nearly 30 years exposed to emergencies and humanitarian crises. Yet, standing at our ‘hospital on the hill’ in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, n...
    Remnants of Home: 6 Years on, the Lasting Mementos of Rohingya Families
    Remnants of Home: 6 Years on, the Lasting Mementos of Rohingya Families
    Once, in villages within Rakhine State in western Myanmar, the Rohingya community lived, raising families and pursuing livelihoods. However, that exis...
    Rohingya: 5 years, 5 stories
    Rohingya: 5 years, 5 stories
    Doctors Without Borders / ­Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) spoke with five Rohingya people living in refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, to under...
    We arrived in Bangladesh in 2017. We came here because Rohingya were being arrested and murdered in Myanmar. Our neighbourhoods were burning one after another. We observed this situation for eight days, hoping things would calm down. But things only got worse. Everyone was scared for their lives and started fleeing wherever they could.
    Hashimullah, a refugee in Cox's Bazar