What happens when a ‘humanitarian corridor’ becomes the hottest property on a regional chessboard?
In this episode, journalist Shafiur Rahman dissects Bangladesh’s sudden offer to open a UN-run aid route into war‑torn Rakhine. From cyclone damage and junta blockades to cabinet flip‑flops and social‑media free‑for‑alls, he tracks how an emergency food lifeline morphed into a geopolitical tug‑of‑war.
We hear why Dhaka’s new rights‑heavy rhetoric (red line warning to Arakan Army) rings hollow while razor‑wire still cages refugees in Cox’s Bazar, how China, India and the United States read the corridor through pipeline and port lenses, and why Rohingya advocates fear being written out of the script - again. The episode closes with a blunt question: can any convoy truly relieve hunger if it leaves citizenship and justice at the checkpoint?
Skip ahead? Chapter time-codes below let you jump straight to the politics, the geopolitics, or the Rohingya voices.
01:10–02:30 Rakhine’s perfect storm
War, Mocha, earthquake, famine
2:30–05:05 Birth of the corridor idea
Khalilur Rahman’s February soundings → 8 April reveal → UN & Fortify Rights push
05:05–08:30 Dhaka’s political free-for-all
Govt. framing. BNP-led backlash; Jamaat’s 24-hour “independent Arakan” bombshell; carnival of hot takes.
08:30–10:50 Outlandish proposals & local concerns
bdmilitary.com invasion plan, ex-pat academics, using ARSA/RSO, local media scepticism.
10:50-12:25 Big-power chessboard
China-pipeline anxiety, India-Kaladan worries, US vantage point, why sceptics shout “Trojan Horse.”
12:25–16:20 Khalilur Rahman’s ‘red line’ for Arakan Army
Govt bristles, then Khalilur Rahman’s 6 May “justice speech.”
16:20–18:40 Rohingya voices & alignment
Tun Khin/BROUK’s corridor line, alignment with NUG/AA, joint communiqué, demand for a seat at the table.
18:40–20:55 Closing critique
Corridor as potential conveyor belt; rights vs. realpolitik; warning that without citizenship guarantees, hunger relief just cements statelessness.
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