Skip to main content

By Simon Tay
For Nikkei Asian Review

A humanitarian crisis that has been brewing at the border between Myanmar and Bangladesh since 2016 is reaching a critical point. At Cox’s Bazar, just inside Bangladesh, an estimated 740,000 displaced Muslim Rohingya from Myanmar’s Rakhine State are encamped in temporary shelters, hoping that the international community will take them in as refugees or facilitate their safe return to the homes they claim in Myanmar.

International pressure for a solution is growing. Bangladesh’s Foreign Secretary Shahidul Haque recently told the United Nations that the strain of sheltering refugees in the border area has gone from “bad to worse.” Speaking at a Security Council meeting in New York, he urged the U.N. to take “decisive” action. But what can be done?

Full article: Myanmar — investors should be cautious but take the risk [First published in Nikkei Asian Review on 27 March 2019]

CommentariesMedia Coverage

The Business Times Podcast: The New Geography of Growth: Trading Beyond the Giants

In a new podcast collaboration with The Business Times, Simon Tay’s Political Café sees SIIA…
February 6, 20261 min
Commentaries

February 2026 Haze Situation

Singapore is still experiencing minor haze conditions this week, caused by new forest and land…
February 3, 20262 min
Commentaries

The Business Times: Revolutionary America and ‘Asia Alone’

In The Business Times, SIIA Chairman Prof. Simon Tay examines how recent US actions have…
February 2, 20261 min

Website by