for an update on the plight of the rohingya, and their prospects for going home, i'm joined by dan sullivan. he is the senior human rights advocate for refugees international and just spent two months in both bangladesh and myanmar taing to rohingya people there. dan, welcome back to the newshour. >> thank you good to be here. >> nawaz: so mump of the world focused on this region last year afndreds of thousands of rohingya had fled into bangladesh.ha since then, whas changed on the ground? >> we've moved on from the very worst of this human rights abuses, the atrocities we've seen in recent years, where you had hundreds of thousands of people fleeing across the border, to where there's less people coming, and so the conversation has sort of shifted from condemnation to talk of how can we get these peoe?ple hom and that's-- that's understandable, but what's getting missed is it's not just that myanmar has failed to create the conditior thate safe for return. they're actually actively pursuing policies that are make the s wuatise. >> nawaz: how are they making it worse? what's happening on th