'This is not our country': Rohingya refugees prepare to spend their first Ramazan away from home

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The 12-year-old Rohingya outcast longed for Ramazan back in his own town — fish to break the day's quick, endowments from his family and unwinding underneath the trees previously evening supplications at the mosque.

Be that as it may, for MD Hashim and others like him living in messiness in Bangladesh, the beginning of the Islamic blessed month now fills in as a severe indication of all that they have lost since being driven from Myanmar in an armed force crackdown.

"Here, we can't manage the cost of endowments and don't have great sustenance... since this isn't our nation," Hashim told AFP on a fruitless slope in Cox's Bazar region.

The United Nations has depicted the armed force cleanse against the abused minority as ethnic purging, and a large number of Rohingya Muslims were accepted to have been butchered in the slaughter that started last August.

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