A Rohingya teacher named Futhu, pictured above, had chronicled life in his village since he was young. His people needed government permission to marry, he noted, they couldn’t join the army or the police, and women were forced to take birth control or seek illegal abortions.

He dreamed of educating the children in his village. Then the military crackdown came.

Here’s what else is happening

Uber: The company reported its largest-ever loss, exceeding $5 billion, and its slowest-ever revenue growth, renewing questions about the company’s prospects.

Jeffrey Epstein: A senior JPMorgan executive overrode concerns about doing business with the financier because of his lucrative role recruiting new customers, sources told The Times. Prosecutors say Mr. Epstein retained crucial business connections even as he engaged in the sexual trafficking of girls as young as 14.

Food supply: A stark United Nations report said that climate change and degrading land and water resources were threatening the ability of humanity to feed itself.

The Philippines: An American aircraft carrier arrived in Manila, shortly after President Rodrigo Duterte told lawmakers he couldn’t do anything to ward off China’s territorial claims in the South China Sea.

Russia: A fire at a weapons testing range near the city of Severodvinsk killed two people, with conflicting reports about higher radiation levels. The Russian navy, which blamed the incident on an exploding rocket engine, has now suffered two lethal accidents in just over a month.