EBITSB-IN'CHiEf KARRtGAN MONK WANASiNG £BfT08 LARISA KARR NEiSEBITOR MAGGIE HADDOCK ASSISTAM MliS E0IT08 KATiE DEVOE AREEBITBR SARAH SHAOBURNE SAMANTHA SAVERY SPORTS EBIfOi EMILY SPIES PHOTOSRAPMy EOlfOB BRYCE ALBERGHINI MiJlTWEDIA EBIT8R SARAH FORSHEY • • •••■ ■ ' • espy DESK CHIEF REBECCA ANDREWS ABVEgTtSWS iANAfiEB KATIE RITCHIE mmimmmnmm phillip wyatt QfSTRIiOTIBN MANA8E8 ELIZABETHIWALKER: FACIflTY ADVISER MfCHAEL GOUGfY , :T Americans should take responsibilty for global issues The Biue Banner is UNG Asheville's, student newspaper. We publish each: Tuesday except during summer: sessions, f!.nals week and hotiday breaks, uur office is located in Karpen Half 019. The Blue Banner is a designated forum for free speech and welcomes letters to While we sit comfortably in our cushy lives as university students in the United States, in Myanmar, Rohingya Muslim refugees are being hacked and shot to death. Some may question, what this issue has to do with us in a country on the other side of the world? As a part of a university that consistently drills into us the importance of being global cit izens, it is imperative we keep abreast of the news happening in other countries. President Trump oscillates on the issue of addressing the plight of the Ro hingya, from completely ignor ing human rights abuses in Asia during his trip to the continent last November to declaring the U.S. will pledge military support to end the crisis in Myanmar. The Rohingya massacre, with an estimated 10,000 individu als killed in December alone, has recently been compared to the Rwandan genocide, where a million people were killed in one month alone. While these num bers are obviously considerably smaller, it is a crisis that is esca lating on a day-to-day basis and it is a crisis that does not seem to end anytime soon. While there are issues in the U.S. that remain relevant to pro test, we as American citizens should include the slaughter of minorities in other countries in addition to women’s rights and Black Lives Matter inside our opposition. By putting pressure on Trump and other American politicians to address the crisis in Myanmar, we can use our privilege to raise awareness of a people who are being grossly overlooked and left to die in a country that gamers little-to-no publicity. The people of the U.S. are oftentimes in their own little bubble and have been so for too long. With the growing advent of awareness about issues that have plagued our own country for so long, it is also time we stand up and assume the role of global cit izens to fight for people in other countries who do not possess the voices we have become so ac customed to having.