Monday, September 14, 2009

THAILAND Church fights to keep centers for migrant kids open



THAILAND Church fights to keep centers for migrant kids open

September 10, 2009 |  

 

BANGKOK (UCAN) -- Church workers serving migrant children from Myanmar in a southern province are opposing government plans to close down their centers.


Sister Prapatsorn Srivorakul with
migrant children from Myanmar at a
Jesuit Refugee Service centre in Ranong




The Church runs many educational centers in Ranong province, known as Thailand's "Burmese province." These provide basic education to children of Myanmar migrants just across the border.

However, the provincial governor last May announced plans to either close down the centers or place them under the jurisdiction of the education ministry.

Ranong governor Wanchat Wongchaichana, who took office earlier this year, said the province plans to repatriate illegal Myanmar migrants and has ordered that the 96 schools in the province be checked for illegal students.

The government has not set any deadlines for its plans yet.

"Plans to disband the centers for Burmese kids and repatriate them do not solve the problem," said Father Wichien Radomkit, director of Maria Learning Center in Ranong.

"If we send them back, they will only return to Thailand because they suffer a lot from the political situation in their own country," the Stigmatine priest told UCA News.

Father Wichien said he and other Church workers have held several discussions with provincial officials to explain the Church's stand on the matter. The last meeting was in mid-August.

"We explained about children's rights to education," the priest said. "It would be better if the Burmese kids were included in the education system as this would reduce social problems. This would also make it easier for their eventual repatriation because the authorities would have information about them."

Maria Learning Center, set up in 2005, teaches about 300 children subjects such as the English, Myanmar and Thai languages, mathematics and general knowledge. It also sponsors the education of 34 children at Thai government schools.

In Ranong, Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) also runs centers for migrant children from Myanmar.


                                     The living quarters of some Myanmar migrants in Ranong

Sister Prapatsorn Srivorakul, JRS project coordinator, explained that families flee Myanmar because they fear for their own personal safety. She warned that repatriated children could be forcibly enlisted as soldiers or sold in human trafficking.

The nun, who also joined the dialogue sessions with provincial officials, said without education these youngsters might become drug addicts, or engage in drug smuggling, prostitution and other crimes, which would affect the Thai community in Ranong.

The JRS project could help ease the burden on the Thai government, she asserted.

JRS helps build and maintain community-based educational centers, supports teachers' salaries, provides school uniforms, books and sporting gear, and grants scholarships to outstanding students to study in Thai schools.

It provides education for some 800 migrant children aged 5-14 in six educational centers under the guidance of 29 Myanmar and Thai teachers. It also sponsors the education of more than 100 children at 16 Thai schools.

Meanwhile local media reported that the Lawyers' Council of Thailand and other NGOs have also voiced opposition to the government's plan to shut down or take over educational centers for migrant children.

Ranong province has an estimated 200,000 Myanmar migrants and 100,000 local Thais. A JRS report says that most of the Myanmar migrants here are ethnic Mon.

These migrants usually work in the fishing industry, most of them illegally, which makes them vulnerable to exploitation and deportation.

Source :
http://www.ucanews.com/2009/09/10/church-fights-to-keep-centers-for-migrant-kids-open/

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