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Myanmar: The Architecture of Exclusion

  • 18 hours ago
  • 2 min read

Insight Myanmar


Mohammed Siraj, a Rohingya researcher, political analyst, educator, and aspiring legal scholar, is a refugee living in Bangladesh whose work focuses on citizenship, constitutional reform, education, and human rights. He has taught in refugee settings, led projects at the Rohingya Academic Research Institute, and studied the oppressive legal and political structures that, in his view, produced the Rohingya crisis. From the beginning, his central claim is clear: the Rohingya crisis is not simply a humanitarian emergency but a political and institutional crisis rooted in discriminatory law, especially Myanmar’s citizenship framework and constitutional order.


His own life illustrates the plight of his people. Siraj once wanted to become a doctor, but that ambition changed after military violence drove his family from Myanmar to Bangladesh during the mass displacement of Rohingya communities. In the camps, he continued studying through limited educational opportunities, and later pursued research training. He also faced the legal barriers of statelessness: even when he received university offers, he could not use them because he lacked a passport or other travel documents. He turned to law instead of medicine because, in his view, law has systematically shaped the structures that have excluded Rohingya from citizenship, political participation, and protection.


Siraj returns repeatedly to the issue of statelessness. He describes it as one of the greatest obstacles in his life because it restricts movement, blocks access to universities, and narrows the future long before a student can begin to choose among real options. He attended the University of the People, an online university, but he presents that route as a partial solution rather than a real answer to the broader problem. For Rohingya students more generally, he says, the deeper barrier remains legal status: without citizenship, passports, or recognized school certificates, higher education remains difficult to reach.


His research work is rooted in the same conditions. At the Rohingya Academic Research Institute, a community-led educational and research organization in the camps, he studies and supervises projects meant to help Rohingya document their own history and rights in their own voices. He describes the institute as volunteer-driven, under-resourced, and intellectually ambitious. Its purpose is both educational and political, enabling a marginalized community to generate its own narrative instead of depending entirely on outsiders to interpret its experience. Siraj emphasizes that this kind of research must follow clear ethical standards, such as protecting participants’ safety and identity, especially when documenting experiences of violence, displacement, and discrimination.


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