BAFTA award for Sky News’ coverage of Myanmar’s Rohingya crisis

Rohingya crisis: Starvation and death on the beaches
Share

Arakan News Agency

BAFTA has recognised Sky News for filming the first independent evidence of the Rohingya crisis from Myanmar’s Arakan State.

Sky News has won a BAFTA for its news coverage of the Rohingya crisis.

The broadcaster filmed the first independent evidence from Myanmar’s Arakan State, which laid bare the shocking deprivation and desperation among thousands of stranded Rohingya Muslims.

The alarming footage showed emaciated women and newborn babies who were dumped on beaches and left to die – just some of the victims of Myanmar’s brutal crackdown against the Rohingyas.

Collecting the BAFTA, Sky News’ special correspondent Alex Crawford thanked the judges for recognising the importance of the crisis in Myanmar.

“People tell me that British people don’t care what is happening abroad but they do,” she said.

She added that the coverage showed the “desperate conditions of those refugees; it is still going on tonight and this raises their profile”.

“And thanks for showing that brave honest, impartial, independent journalism can hopefully make a difference,” Crawford said.

Sky News had gained two nominations for the news coverage award – the other nod for its reporting on the battle for Mosul as Iraqi forces attempted to reclaim the city from Islamic State control.

Also nominated in the category were Channel 4 and ITV for coverage of the Grenfell Tower fire.

Share

latest news

Mailing list

By clicking the subscribe button, you confirm that you have read our privacy policy.