Dhaka, Sept. 18 -- In September 2017, the writer visited the largest Rohingya refugee camp in Kutupalong, Ukhiya, for the first time. Learning from the media and listening directly from the victims are two completely different things. As many traumatised Rohingya women and children shared their story of horrors, it felt sickening.

"When we first arrived at our refugee camp - one of many set ups in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh - I thought we would be back home in Myanmar after two or three months. My house has since been long gone, burnt to ashes," shared Khin Maung, a Rohingya man. He still can't believe that they would stay here for this long.

It has been four years since around one million Rohingya refugees began living in Ukhiya and Tekna...