Solution to Rohingya crisis: China, other Asian nations’ role vital

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UNB, Yuxi City (Yunnan) :
Bangladesh has raised the Rohingya issue in an international media forum here and sought more Chinese and other Asian nations’ involvement to solve the Rohingya crisis for regional peace and stability.
Bangladesh stressed that the Rohingya crisis needs to be solved permanently ensuring safe return of Rohingyas to their place of origin in Myanmar’s Rakhine State.
The China-South Asia Media Forum was held on the sidelines of the second China-South Asia Cooperation Forum that ended here at Hilton Yuxi Fuxian Lake Resort on Tuesday evening.
President of Xinhua Net Tian Shubin, President of Yunnan Media Group He Yaning, Controller of News, Bangladesh Betar Tania Naznin, Senior Information Officer, Ministry of Information, Bangladesh Akram Uddin Ahammad Mir, Deputy Editor in Chief of Xinhuanet Liu Jiawen, Editor in Chief of China Economic Net, Assistant Editor in Chief of China.com.cn Zheng Wenhua, Executive Chairman of National News Agency of Nepal Harihar Adhikary and senior journalists from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Afghanistan, Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand and Sri Lanka, among others, spoke.
Speaking at the roundtable dialogue of the Forum, Tania Naznin said, “We expect more Chinese and other Asian nations’ involvement to solve the Rohingya crisis.”
She requested the media people in China and other countries to visit Rohingya camps in Cox’s Bazar district and report on the ground situation.
Bangladesh is now hosting over 1.2 million Rohingyas and majority of them entered Bangladesh since August 25, 2017.

The speakers highlighted the challenges of the media industry, digital transformation; and laid emphasis on cooperation to create new communication order.
They said history has taught a lot to work together and live together addressing challenges.
The journalists said if they work together, regional development is possible.
The China-South Asia Media Forum, participants said, serves as a platform for media professionals from China and South Asia countries to pursue stronger cooperation and promote people-to-people exchange.
Over a hundred of professionals and experts attended the Media Forum that aims to strengthen media cooperation for people-to-people exchange among China and South Asia countries.
“China and South Asian countries are connected both geographically and culturally,” said Tian Shubin, Vice President of China Federation of Internet Societies and Chairman as well as President of Xinhuanet.
He said media should contribute more to all-round, multi-layered and wide-ranging cooperation among countries as the bridge connecting different civilizations.
Tian also proposed the participants set up a fair and reasonable communication order, build a platform of interconnections and meet the challenges of media developing together.
Madhav Sharma, Language and Culture Advisor to the President of Nepal, said China’s Belt and Road Initiative can be a great support for media cooperation, on the basis of improving the understanding and emotional attachment among participating countries.
Wang Chaowen, President of Cankaoxiaoxi, a Chinese reference information newspaper, shared his idea on how traditional print media, such as Cankaoxiaoxi, embraces the new media age by improving social media management.
For the purpose, he called for a closer and broader media cooperation.
“We are ready to closely cooperate with friends from South Asian media,” Wang said.
Akram Mir said people-to-people exchange builds relationships across cultures and helps the exchange of thoughts and skills of all kinds, and it is closely tied up with media cooperation.
“The stronger the media cooperation is, the better the people-to-people exchange can be,” he said.
“People-to-people exchange generates mutual understanding and respect for each other,” said Saranga Wijeyarathne, Director General of Sri Lanka Rupavahini(TV) Corporation.

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