What do health and human rights advocates do when they come across egregious abuses by a government, like PHR did three weeks ago in Bangladesh?

Phase 2: Design an emergency household survey to measure malnutrition and food insecurity in the population.
Phase 3: Take photos. Lots of them. One out of 50 may be good enough for print. (And don’t forget to get informed consent!)
Phase 4: Analyze the qualitative and quantitative data to ensure a robust report, write like mad, and pitch it to the media. With a little luck, they may bite.
Associated Press broke the story last night, appearing minutes later in the New York Times. Other coverage has followed in numerous outlets, including the Boston Globe , AFP and BBC Read all about it: Stateless and Starving: Persecuted Rohingya Flee Burma and Starve in Bangladesh.
Post script: A BIG thanks to my colleague, Dr. Parveen Parmar, whose emergency-physician calm in the field made all the difference in completing this emergency assessment.
Posted in Conflict, General Human Rights, Health, News Coverage
Tagged afp, ap, associated press, Bangladeshi government, BBC, boston globe, Burma, Burmese refugees, human rights, Kutupalong, msf, Myanmar, new york times, Parveen Parmar, refoulement, Richard Sollom, Rohingya, unhcr