
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A landmark case brought by Gambia accusing Myanmar of committing genocide against the minority Muslim Rohingya has opened at the International Court of Justice in The Hague.
It's the first full genocide case the court has heard in more than a decade and legal experts say the outcome could influence other cases — including South Africa's case against Israel over the war in Gaza.
Myanmar denies the genocide allegations — but investigators say the case could set important precedents for how genocide is defined and proven under international law.
Guest: Matt Bugher, Research Director and Legal counsel, Southeast Asia Human Rights Project, Harvard Univ Asia Centre
Producer: Anne Barker
By ABC Australia4
1313 ratings
A landmark case brought by Gambia accusing Myanmar of committing genocide against the minority Muslim Rohingya has opened at the International Court of Justice in The Hague.
It's the first full genocide case the court has heard in more than a decade and legal experts say the outcome could influence other cases — including South Africa's case against Israel over the war in Gaza.
Myanmar denies the genocide allegations — but investigators say the case could set important precedents for how genocide is defined and proven under international law.
Guest: Matt Bugher, Research Director and Legal counsel, Southeast Asia Human Rights Project, Harvard Univ Asia Centre
Producer: Anne Barker

85 Listeners

89 Listeners

57 Listeners

14 Listeners

19 Listeners

45 Listeners

11 Listeners

3 Listeners

19 Listeners

29 Listeners

91 Listeners

53 Listeners

66 Listeners

8 Listeners

18 Listeners

8 Listeners

11 Listeners

351 Listeners

10 Listeners

155 Listeners

10 Listeners

78 Listeners

26 Listeners

128 Listeners

183 Listeners

4 Listeners

69 Listeners

2 Listeners

61 Listeners

6 Listeners