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Rights & Wrongs

Rights & Wrongs

De: Human Rights Watch
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Rights & Wrongs is a bi-monthly podcast from Human Rights Watch. It explores stories from the places where abuses are unfolding around the world, through the eyes and ears of the people on the frontlines. Human Rights Watch investigators span the globe and work in more than 100 countries, producing dozens of meticulously researched reports every year. Host, Ngofeen Mputubwele, takes listeners behind the scenes of these in-depth investigations. Go to hrw.org to find out more about our investigations and hrw.org/podcast/donate to support the work we do.Copyright 2026 Human Rights Watch Ciencias Sociales Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Getting From Here To There
    Mar 30 2026

    When anti-Rohingya sentiment turned into gunshots in Myanmar in 2017, 16-year-old Maung Sawyeddollah was forced to flee. But what do you do when you’re forced to leave your home? Where do you go? This week on The Great Unrooting, host Ngofeen Mputubwele asks how migrants get from here to there.

    What happens if you need medicine while you’re traveling or are living with disabilities that make traveling difficult? What challenges do migrants face as they make these strenuous journeys?

    This week, we hear from people around the world who have faced these questions. We hear about Maung’s mom, who fled while pregnant. Her story, alongside accounts from HRW researchers, paints a picture of resilience and bravery of the migrants who risk everything in pursuit of safety.

    Maung Sawyeddollah: Agent of Change, Rohingya Muslim

    Nadia Hardman: Researcher, Refugee and Migrant Rights Division at Human Rights Watch

    Emina Ćerimović: Associate Director, Disability Rights Division at Human Rights Watch

    Lindsay Mputubwele: Doula and child-birth educator

    Chinda Precious: Nigerian refugee

    Hanaa Rahimi: Former Afghan policewoman sharing her story under alias

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    23 m
  • The Unrooting
    Mar 16 2026

    Maung Sawyeddollah grew up in a small town in Myanmar where, for years, life felt ordinary. That was before the rumors began. Social media fueled sectarian division, communities turned against each other. Then the soldiers arrived. It was a balmy night in August 2017 when Maung first heard the sound of gunfire. His family was forced to make an impossible choice: stay in the home they love or embark on a perilous journey to Bangladesh. They grabbed a few belongings and fled.

    Through Maung’s extraordinary story—from fleeing for his life in Myanmar to attending the prestigious New York University—this episode explores the moment Maung’s family made the fateful decision to abandon their home, and the heart-wrenching decisions millions of people face when the world they know becomes unlivable.

    The Great Unrooting begins with one life, and opens onto a global story of displacement, resilience, and hope.

    Maung Sawyeddollah: Agent of Change, Rohingya Muslim

    Mausi Segun: Executive Director of the Africa Division at Human Rights Watch

    Nadia Hardman: Researcher, Refugee and Migrant Rights Division at Human Rights Watch

    Kyle Knight: Associate Director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Rights Program at Human Rights Watch

    Belkis Wille: Associate Director of Crisis & Conflict division at Human Rights Watch.

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    28 m
  • PROLOGUE: The Night the Sky Cracked Open with Fire
    Mar 16 2026

    Welcome to The Great Unrooting, a five-episode narrative podcast special season of Rights & Wrongs that explores what it means to lose home — and what it takes to start again. Anchored in the story of Maung, a Rohingya refugee now living in New York, the series traces his journey of flight, survival, and rebuilding and explores displacement at a moment when more people are forcible displaced than at any point since World War II.

    Excerpt from forthcoming poem, "The Rusted Key" by Kumar M. Tiku.

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    5 m
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