Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Detained Chin Refugee Woman visited by UNHCR

21st, March 2010
Kuala Lumpur
by Salai C C

Mounting concern over a Chin refugee woman detained in Lenggeng Camp; Thla Tin Sui was met by the UNHCR and recognized her as refugee under the vulnerable pregnant women when the UNHCR team visited the camp this week.
After one of the biggest online base news agency in the country Malaysiakini interviewed her husband, International Organization and local NGOs called the government to consider about the pregnant women detained and give them opportunity to meet with the UNHCR office base in Kuala Lumpur. She and her husband were arrested during the night-raid at Kajang on 1st August, 2009 while her pregnancy was just one month ago and jailed them to different camp.
According to ex-detainee pregnant women; named Moe Moe Khaing of 30 ages released on Friday said, "I and Thla Tin Sui are pregnant women among female detainees in the camp. I am very thankful to the UNHCR officers for getting me out of the camp but I deeply sympathize for my old inmate Thla Tin Sui who is still in the camp as her health condition is getting worse. Both of her legs have been swollen since she couldn't eat the food properly inside the Camp. She is now of malnutrition and it is awesome to deliver a baby inside the camp.



"Besides Thla Tin Sui, another three of Chin refugee women arrested in somewhere arrived in our Camp last Thursday and when the UNHCR team attempted to meet them, the team weren't allowed by just giving a reason of being new arrival and were told to wait two weeks more for interview of their refugee status by the guards" Moe Moe Khaing added.

"I am much gladded when I heard my wife Thla Tin Sui has been met by the UNHCR team. I also hope that she will be released soon because the UNHCR office is the only one which understands our problem" the husband said.

Some of International Non-governmental Organization and Local NGOs had blamed the Malaysia government due to death in detention centre and neglecting to take care of the pregnant women in detention centre, who are in need of medical treatment and psychological therapy. By contrast, being detained is not of our choices we make, but it is of our current situation we Chin refugees are facing now and no one knows what will be next to our miserable lives.

Transgender Malaysian accepted as a refugee

The Refugee Review Tribunal has upheld the claim for refugee status of a transgendered woman from Malaysia, on the basis that she would be persecuted in Malaysia, due to her status.

It appears that most transgendered people in Malaysia work as prostitutes, in part because they cannot obtain other employment in part due to stigma, and in part because they cannot change the gender on their compulsory ID cards, which shows them in their old gender. Most live below the poverty line.

The applicant had been rejected by her mother and sisters, and society in general, and arrested and fined for being a prostitute, as it was assumed that as her ID showed that she was male, was in an area where prostitutes were known, and was found with a male, she must have been a prostitute.

The applicant had applied to the Department of Immigration and Citizenship, been rejected as falling within the class of people as a refugee, and appealed to the Tribunal.

Statements by the applicant were heart rending:

In Malaysia I do not count as a person. I am not considered to be a man because I look like a woman. I am not considered to be a woman because my identity card says that I am a man. I have no rights to obtain employment or open a bank account, or even to get health insurance in my name. Because I can’t open a bank account I can’t purchase a house. If I am sick and go to the hospital, they will put me in the men’s ward. Any prescription or receipt they give me will be issued in the name of [applicant’s former name]. The pharmacy calls out that name and it is very embarrassing for me to answer to that name in front of everyone. People laugh at me and I worry that someone will try to beat me or assault me because I am transgender. It is not possible for me to change my identity card to say that I am a woman.

I cannot live in Malaysia There is nobody to take care of me and I am not allowed to work because of my identity. I was arrested three times just because of who I am and I was forced to pay money just so that I wouldn’t be put in jail. I did not do anything wrong but Malaysian society and the government thinks that there is something wrong with who I am. I do not want to work as a prostitute and that is the only life for me there. I am a transgender person I am being persecuted by the government and by the authorities in Malaysia who will not allow me to survive....

I [the applicant] 38 years, of age whom struggling in my life for justice. I would like to take this opportunity to express my feeling sorrow and disappointment at my country which I am living presently.

I am a Malaysian which rich in everything except for person like me who born as a boy but living as a girl. I had been going thru painful life during my time. There is no justice, understanding, pity and sympathy on people like us. I had been fighting for life for justice in my country but its failed.

My mum doesn’t work. She are (sic) housewife the only person who take care of me is my father (he reasonally (sic) past away) there is no one to take care of me.

In my country they look down on (transsexual) like me and they don’t accept for what I am and who I am they only care for their needs an their races and sex.

I am a complete woman now. I tried to get a job they look down on me because of my (Identity). Its return that my gender as are (male). In Malay it means (Lelaki).

This is the reason why I am expressing my feeling to you sir/mdm how painful and difficult life I am going thru in my country.

I am begging for leniency from you sir/mdm to allow me to stay in your country.

I would really appreciate if you sir/Mdm grant my wish...



Burmese Ethnics Group Meet in Malaysia

22 March 2010: A two-day seminar aimed at fostering closer cooperation among Burma’s ethnic Diaspora communities in Malaysia was held in Kuala Lumpur over the weekend.
The conference, jointly organized by the Coalition of Burma Ethnics Malaysia (CoBEM) and the Ethnic Nationalities Council (ENC), brought together for the first time over 350 representatives from different ethnic groups, as well as, solidarity groups in Malaysia.

It follows a series of new developments inside Burma in recent weeks, including the announcement earlier this month of new election laws, as well as, renewed pressures on ethnic cease-fire groups and new military offensives by the military junta in ethnic areas ahead of the junta’s planned elections.
Malaysia is home to one of the largest refugee populations from Burma in the region.

Organizers say that the conference was a unique opportunity that allows members of the various Burma’s ethnic groups currently living in Malaysia to interact with each other, and with leading figures within the movement.

“We are very pleased to see so many young ethnic men and women participating in the conference and to be able to have frank discussion with them on so many important issues affecting the ethnic people in Burma,” says Victor Biak Lian of the Ethnic Nationalities Council.

The discussions center on major challenges currently facing Burma’s ethnic nationalities, including, the political and humanitarian crises, which continue to dog efforts toward national reconciliation and genuine democratic reforms in Burma.

One of the immediate outcomes of the conference was an agreement to strengthen cooperation among the ethnic groups through information sharing and working together toward a common cause.

Side events of the conference also include meeting and open discussion between visiting ethnic leaders and each of their respective ethnic community members. The visiting ethnic leaders are from Shan, Mon, Karen and Chin.



Bangladesh Blocks Refugee Registration for Burmese Muslims Outside Camps

Muslims from Burma who are now living outside refugee camps in Bangladesh have been denied the chance to register as refugees with the UNHCR by the Bangladesh government due to fear of triggering an exodus of Muslims from Burma, according to official reports.



Bangladesh Food and Disaster Management Minister Abdur Razzaque refused to allow the registration when he met recently with UNHCR representative to Bangladesh, Craig Sanders, at the secretariat.



"International agencies, including UNHCR, are creating pressure on the government to register more Refugees living outside the camps. We, being a poor nation can not give shelter to so many refugees and therefore want their repatriation to their homeland," Razzaque said.



Thousands of Muslims from Burma, who are known internationally as Rohingya, are living outside of Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox's Bazar without any kind of help from the outside world.



International organizations are now pressing the government of Bangladesh to allow registration of more Rohingya refugees outside the camps on humanitarian grounds.



The minister added, "If the government started registering more Rohingyas, it would encourage a fresh influx of the refugees into Bangladesh and worsen law and order in the coastal districts of Chittagong and Cox's Bazar."



About 25,000 Burmese Muslim refugees living in camps have been registered as refugees, but many thousands more living outside the camp are being denied the chance to register as refugees by the Bangladesh government.



"The Rohingya refugee issue was no longer a national problem of the country as it has become a regional concern. The Rohingya refugees, also illegally migrating to Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia, have become a regional concern," he said.



Dhaka has tried to repatriate the Burmese refugees staying in camps in Cox's Bazar through negotiations with Rangoon since they came to Bangladesh in 1992, but the plan has remained unsuccessful.



Muslims who are living in northern Arakan State in Burma have been illegally crossing into Bangladesh on a daily basis, despite intensified patrols on the border by the Bangladesh Rifles.



Bangladesh Food and Disaster Management Minister Abdur Razzaque also refuted international media reports that Bangladesh police had launched a crackdown on the Rohingya refugees, saying some non-governmental organizations were involved in the propaganda for their own interest.



The minister warned that the authorities are trying to identify the NGOs involved in such activities, saying, "We have asked the NGO bureau to investigate the matter and take action."



K'Cho Leader arrested in New Delhi


The K'Cho Leader, Salai Mnai Thang  in New Delhi,  was arrested by the police during a protest in New Delhi March 19, 2010. Salai Mnai Thang is a Secretary of K'Cho Ethnic Association Of India based in New Delhi.  The protesters demanded the release of Myanmar's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and for Myanmar's government to begin dialogue with Suu Kyi and other legitimate representatives of ethnic groups before the elections, according to a media release.

Shouting slogans against the junta, the belligerent Burmese protesters surrounded the Burmese embassy in New Delhi this morning and painted the wall of the embassy in red with the words 'Than Shwe Go to Hell. Elections No Need' before the Delhi police arrived and detained them. Photo. Mizzima. They were protesting against the electoral laws announced by the ruling military junta for the 2010 elections.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

A Chin Refugee Died in Juru Detention Centre

Couple of days ago, a recognized Chin refugee named Nang Kap Za Pau a-ka Thang Suan Mung of 17 ages was jailed in Juru detention center in Dec, 2009. He was arrested on the way entering to Malaysia in the border and directly sent to Juru where he was died. He was believed to be suffered from Leptospirosis which is caused by the faeces and urine of animal that contaminated drinking water (it is called animal contagious disease by the locals) and lack of medical care despite the long affected sickness. His detention body number was 3064.
"He was too sick two weeks ago and was allowed being hospitalized in Penang Bukit Matajam Hospital by the Camp authority, where he was died on 10/3/2010 and buried on 12/3/2010 by the help of Catholic Youth Fellowship, Penang, Malaysia and CCF (Chin Christian Fellowship) base in Kuala Lumpur" according to the firm source. In much effort for the funeral service, leaders of CCF, esp, Rev. Lal Pek Lian have widely participated and that service would be impossible without their priceless help done. The detailed information relating to his causing death is being kept investigated by the community body but no result has found yet as the hospital couldn't clarify his sickness on his medical document.
It is however not known well of why he was dead and what caused his sickness. Very sad, the Camp authority delayed informing UNHCR, CRC and his relatives. With respect to the disease being contagious in detention center, two of his inmates are hospitalized where Nang Kap Za Pau dead and no one is allow to visit them that can somehow indicate that they are in a dangerous situation. The information that could be reached out is that, according to source is given; three of detainees had been died in that same detention center believed to be suffered from the same disease since 2008.
It was such a great blessing for refugees having those valuable individuals who are committed to helping those are critically in need.
Over many years, hundreds of recognised refugees from Myanmar had been put in several detention centers. It was said that the arrested refugees were systematically accused of in the court in cases of robbery, theft which was definitely groundless and meant in prevention of the intention act of police. That's why dozens of refugees have been put in Camp and detention center on account of such deceptive accusations that means a recognised refugee shouldn't be put in the jail or detention as his/her status is under the protection of UNHCR.
Instead, he/she should be allowed for refuge temporarily in accordance with the UN Charter. As a matter of fact, UNHCR should not be hesitating in undertaking the rescue task force over refugees detained, by which they are the only potential and the authority as the governmental body only respect links with UNHCR.
Until now, hundreds of detainees are left detained in Camp and detention center that is causing the big traumatic for the related families as well as the community. For that serious and accountable reason, the challenging issue is supposed to be upon the pandemic disease spreading overwhelmingly for those of detainees as of the new access.

Malaysia arrests minorities fleeing Myanmar

(CNN) -- Malaysian authorities have arrested a boatload of ethnic minorities fleeing Myanmar off the holiday island of Langkawi.
The Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency says the 93 Rohingya men, aged between 16 and 50 years old, are being detained by immigration authorities in Malaysia.
The Rohingya are an ethnic Muslim minority from western Myanmar who say they have been persecuted by that country's ruling military junta and have long sought refuge in other places.
A local Rohingya representative said that Thai authorities had towed the boat carrying the 93 boys and men out to sea and given them supplies, before cutting them adrift to float south into Malaysian waters.
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Thai authorities denied the claim.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Thani Thongpakdi confirmed the Thai Navy did find a boat of refugees in international waters on March 4. The men told the Navy they were from Rakhine state in western Myanmar.
Thongpakdi insisted the Thai Navy gave them food and water supplies and then "let them go on their way," because they'd told the Navy they were heading to another country.
A CNN investigation last year of the plight of the Rohingya found compelling evidence that the Thai Navy had been towing boatloads of Rohingya away from the Thai coast, far out to sea, before cutting them adrift. It's still not clear how many died as a result.
A Thai government spokesman recently claimed CNN's photographic evidence of the Rohingya boats being towed out to sea was faked.
But last year Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva admitted there were "some instances" when boats were pushed out to sea, and vowed to investigate who was responsible and bring them to account. No one in the Thai Navy has yet been charged or disciplined as a result of the probe.
Myanmar's regime does not recognize the 750,000 Rohingya as one of the national races. Many of them have fled persecution in Myanmar to neighboring Bangladesh, where they face dire conditions.
A report that came out this month by Physicians for Human Rights noted acute levels of malnutrition among a surging camp population.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Ten job centres to be launched by PM in March


JOHOR BARU: At least 10 job centres will be launched within densely populated areas in the country to provide career guidance and assistance to job-seekers beginning next month.
Human Resources Minister Datuk Dr S. Subramaniam said the centres, to be run by his ministry, would be located in areas frequented by young people.
He said the free service would be launched by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak next month. The centres would be eventually set up in all districts in the country.
“We hope everyone, especially the young, will take advantage of this service,” Dr Subra­maniam said, adding that among the places identified for the centres were Danga Bay in Johor and Cyberjaya in Selangor.
He was speaking to reporters at a special job-matching programme organised for the poor and disabled by the Johor Manpower Department and the Johor Welfare Depart­ment.
Dr Subramaniam said the new centres would not duplicate the responsibilities of the state Labour and Manpower departments as job-matching was not their core business.
On complaints that the Government was penalising all employers of newly employed foreign maids by forcing them to attend a half-day course when less than 1% had problems, Dr Subramaniam called on all parties to be patient.
“We cannot take the maids alone for this course as that would be meaningless. Both parties have to be responsible,” he said, adding that the effectiveness of the courses would be studied.
Dr Subramaniam pointed out that the Government was doing this not just for the maids but the employers and maid agencies as well.
“We feel that maid agencies must be more involved other than fulfilling the three-month contractual obligation to find a replacement if the current maid runs away,” he said.
On the Malaysian Trades Union Congress’ suggestion for refugees to be allowed to work in labour-strapped sectors, he said that while it could be done on a humanitarian basis, the Government had to be careful not to open the floodgates for refugees to come to Malaysia seeking employment.

13 groups from seven countries support Merak asylum seekers

(By Grant Morgan, International secretary, Socialist Worker-New Zealand, March 09, 2010) - Here is an international statement supporting the asylum seekers in Merak, Indonesia.
It has been jointly issued by 13 organisations from seven countries: Indonesia, Malaysia, India, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand.
A call for urgent action by the Indonesian and Australian governments
Merak asylum seekers need a just solution
The situation at Merak has dragged on much too long. For over 120 days, the 254 mostly Tamil asylum seekers have been stranded there. They have suffered hardships at the hands of the Australian and Indonesian authorities. The International Organisation of Migration funded by Australia to provide welfare assistance for asylum seekers has used its control over food, and medicine and other welfare to deprive the refugees of basic needs such as medicine, tarpaulins, and toilets to try to force people off the boat.
With each passing day, the conditions deteriorate further and the suffering grows. The lack of medical attention and basic care cost the life of a 29 year-old man, Jacob Christin, in December 2009.
Ministers of the Australian government and now Prime Minister Rudd, himself have indicated that the Australian government will re-settle people from the boat found to be refugees.
The Indonesian government says that it will not use force against the refugees and asylum seekers. It also says that it expects the Australian government to play a role in resettling the Merak people.
The misery at Merak must not be allowed to continue, day after day, week after week.
Conditions needed to Resolve the Situation
The Indonesian government is proposing that the Merak people disembark and be held in a secure renovated warehouse – a detention facility - in Bekasi. They have agreed that there will be no sharing of information with the Sri Lankan government and no victimization of any of the leaders, or anyone else on the boat. They have agreed that UNHCR will have immediate access to the asylum seekers after they disembark.
These conditions go some way to meeting the minimum conditions necessary if people on the boat are to be confident that they have a secure future.
But there are issues that must be settled if there is going to a just resolution to the situation at Merak:
(i) the Indonesian government must immediately open access to human rights, welfare, and other groups to provide support to the people at Merak;
(ii) immigration verification and UNHCR processing can begin without having to disembark;
(iii) that the asylum seekers have legal assistance for immigration verification and processing;
(iv) that there is immediate access for human rights and other welfare groups to ensure the provision of medical and other humanitarian support, as well as independent supervision of disembarkation and on-shore accommodation conditions; (v) on-shore accommodation for the Merak people should be open, not locked. It is the height of hypocrisy for the Australian government to pursue the Indonesian Solution that allows conditions in Indonesia that would be unacceptable in Australia. Under the formal requirements of Australian refugee policy, families with children are not held in locked facilities;
(vi) a guarantee that the people will be kept together;
(vii) that the refugees are allowed to keep their mobile phones and the laptops that have been their lines of communication with the outside world;
(viii) a guarantee of non refoulment ie not returned to danger in Sri Lanka.
On its part, the Australian government should immediately provide whatever humanitarian and financial assistance is needed to allow the Indonesian government to meet these requirements. But most significantly the Australian government must move beyond the vague statements that it will play a role in resettlement, to stating clearly the conditions and timeline for resettlement.
Unless these conditions are met, there can be no enduring solution for the asylum seekers and refugees. People who have left the boat have been kept in appalling immigration cells in Jakarta. Indonesian officials violated internationally recognized protocols regarding refugee rights by allowing Sri Lankan navy officers to interrogate refugees in the cells.
There must be an immediate improvement for the humanitarian conditions for the boat. The systematic deprivation and mistreatment of the asylum seekers must stop. Indonesian officers (such as the Indonesian police officer, Pakino) who have been shown to be guilty of harassment and abuse of asylum seekers must be withdrawn and disciplined for their actions
Reject the Indonesian Solution
On a wider scale of refugee rights and regional policy, the Australian and Indonesian governments must commit to a drastic re-assessment of the Indonesian Solution. At the moment, the Indonesian government is effectively involved in a conspiracy with the Australian government to deny Tamil and other asylum seekers under the Refugee Convention.
Asylum seekers are not criminals. They have an internationally recognized right to seek asylum. They should not be arbitrarily detained in Indonesia or Australia. Australia should not be funding, and Indonesia should not be building, detention centres when people need houses, schools and medical centres.
Australia must help Indonesia established refugee processing to international standards and it must guarantee re-settlement for those found to be refugees. last year Australia re-settled only 32 refugees from Indonesia
Urgent Action Needed
The Indonesian government can act immediately to open access to the refugees, allow humanitarian assistance and begin immigration verification. It should release those being held in Jakarta and allow them to return to the boat if they wish. The Australian government should instruct IOM to return to the port area and provide humanitarian assistance.
Urgent meetings are needed between the Indonesian government, representatives from the boat, Indonesian human rights, Legal Aid, refugee rights and welfare NGO’s to resolve the outstanding issues. These meetings should also include representatives of the Australian government and Australian refugee advocates to discuss the conditions of resettlement.
The people on the boat at Merak are fleeing persecution in Sri Lanka. One hundred and nine of them are already recognized UNHCR refugees.
All they are asking is that their rights as refugees and human beings are protected by the Australian and Indonesian governments – both of which say that uphold human rights and the values of the Refugee Convention.
Signatories
* Refugee Action Coalition (Sydney)
* Working Peoples Association (Indonesia)
* Tamil Solidarity (United Kingdom)
* Socialist Worker (New Zealand)
* Socialist Party of Malaysia
* Indonesia Human Rights Committee (Auckland)
* Canadian Humanitarian Appeal for Relief of Tamils (HART)
* Indonesia Legal Aid Foundation
* Confederation Congress of Indonesia Union Alliance
* Refugee Rights Action Network (Perth)
* Save-Tamils, Tamil Nadu India

Neglected Burmese Refugees from Malaysia Busy to Find Safe Territory

By William Mathew
Jakarta, Jan. 10, 2010: Recently, the last week of December 2009, some neglected and discriminated Rohingya Burmese refugees managed to find a safe territory in the Indian Ocean.
The sea falls in Australian territory as at least 10 Burmese refugees from Malaysia were picked by Australian navy on 29 Dec 2009. These refugees were found by Australian petrol aircraft.
Reports confirmed that all of these refugees identified as Rohigya Burmese to whom no protection is awarded by concern UN Refugee Agency and thus sailing in Aussie territory after broke down engines.
One of them is Habiburahman (30) who is actively involved in Human Rights and Democratic Movement, able to speak well English. Beside him, another refugee rights activist Sayad Kasim is found very active in advocating the matter of suffering Rohingya refugees in Malaysia. Both of them are coordinators for a Malaysia based NGO known as Arakan Rohingya Refugee Committee (ARRC) and 1990s elected party leaders in exile regional office for South East Asia (National Democratic Party for Human Rights-NDPHR)
Report also confirmed that an hour later of the patrol aircraft found them in 22 miles away from Ashmore Island, at the after noon of the day; they were safely rescued by Navy-88. In-Charge officer Lt.Robert Wright and teams had warmly provided foods and inquest about health condition, on the boat.
After that they were handed over to custom ship (Ashmore Guardian ACV-110) and spent 3 days on the ship, they all were lifted to Christmas Island by Navy 87.
Finally, they all were moved to North West Point, Immigration detention centre of Christmas Island by kind cooperation of police, custom and immigration..
An acting monitor of the camp said that overall population of detainees in here make about 2000 and they are mostly from Sri Langka and Afghan and a few numbers from Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Kuwait and Burma. Out of them, only 43 are Rohingya Burmese who recognized as genuine refugees by the UNHCR in Malaysia but compelled to flee there to escape inhumanity and to find a safe territory.
However the camp here is like a hotel, we never been have like this before and respected human rights and dignity and assessments. We get everything here like accommodation with air-condition and necessary machines like washing, refrigerator and others facilities like 3 times meals and extra diet foods, internet and library, playgrounds and games and toys, recreation centre, hot and cool shower, clothing and others…., said Habib.
Habib also explained that Rohigya refugees in Malaysia are victims of human rights abuses and marginalized in refugees quota due to existing unsettle problems of unavoidable circumstances in Burma. Due to lack of equal and fair treatment in UNHCR-mass Rohingya face more problems compare to others and mostly spent in arrest, detention and deportation; and sold out to human traffickers or border smugglers.
There is no mechanism for protection of refugees and sincere engagement by acting operation partners, as well as misinforming to stake holder parties by those actors. The worst is that Rohingyas are being used for various purposes with unworkable solution, which pave a role of conspiracy or exploitation. If not, why the problem still exists?
Although UNHCR new representative is substituted since 2009, UNHCR policy on Rohingya is found that Rohigya themselves to pave integration into possible society therefore Rohingya started moving to search possible territory in new regions by alternative way.
Habib affirmed that “I personally faced security problems and mostly spent in detention and deported in four occasions during spent in 10 years in Malaysia. that is why I planned to seek refuge in safe country. UNHCR, Indonesia is also recognize the refugees as migrants and handed over to International organization for Migration (IOM). IOM finally gave 2million Rupees and proposed to smuggle into Malaysia back. Thus I finally reached to here.”
A refugee representative in Serdang area of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia said they are lucky but we had been cheated and put the jungle for few days. Finally arrested by police and kept in police lock up of Banting for several days. We have only a way is this…..

Q&A: UNHCR resettlement staffer embraces opportunity to help fellow refugees


Q&A: UNHCR resettlement staffer embraces opportunity to help fellow refugees

WASHINGTON, DC, United States, March 5 (UNHCR) – UNHCR staff member Tina Hinh is one of thousands of Vietnamese refugees who have been resettled to the United States. In 1978, while her mother was pregnant with Tina, her family escaped from Vietnam by boat. They ended up on Palau Bidong in Malaysia, an island that became one of the largest camps for refugees from Indochina. Her family was accepted for resettlement in the US in 1979. Tina recently spoke to UNHCR Public Information Assistant Lilli Tnaib. Excerpts from the interview:

What have you learned from your parents about life on Palau Bidong?

My mother tells me that life was very uncomfortable and difficult in the camp. My mother gave birth to me in the middle of the night with the help of a midwife in very difficult circumstances. We were sleeping in makeshift huts. My parents would swim from the island out to boats, using gold as money, to buy merchandise to sell to other refugees in order to make a little money. I became sick and my mother had to take me to a French medical boat until I was better.

While my family was there, UNHCR had a presence in Kuala Lumpur. Their staff would come to the camps by boat, register refugees and give assistance to the refugees. Later, this became a large resettlement processing site, but when my parents were there in 1979 resettlement was done on a much smaller, ad hoc scale.

How did you come to the United States?

My entire extended family on my father's side all left Vietnam at different times. My family and my father's sisters left together for Malaysia. My grandparents and the rest of my family went to Hong Kong. Through a resettlement programme we were all able to find ach other. I had an aunt who was resettled to the US in Michigan with the help of Church World Service. Through family tracing with UNHCR, a pastor in Michigan helped find us in Malaysia. So we joined my aunt in the spring of 1979, before the official US resettlement programme was set up in the 1980s.

Tell us about the challenges your family first faced in the United States?

When my parents came 30 years ago they did not know any English and they had no money. They only had a high school education, but they were able to work very hard and build a nice life for themselves and my [older] brother and me. It was most challenging during the first 10 years when they had to work six days a week, twelve hours a day. They worked a series of odd jobs until their English improved and, about 20 years ago, they each started their own business. Because they were working so hard, I grew up as a latch key kid. Their story became the American dream. They were able to build their lives and afford an education for their children. Fifteen years ago, my mother's family came from Vietnam to join us. My parents employed them at first and now they are also thriving with their own businesses.

What kind of refugee work have you done with UNHCR and others?

I've worked mostly in resettlement. I was working along the Thai-Myanmar border with the International Rescue Committee helping refugees from Myanmar resettle to the US before I joined UNHCR. I interviewed refugees who were going to the US. Now, I work as the assistant resettlement officer with the UNHCR office in Washington doing global resettlement statistics and resettlement casework.

Do you think your personal story has influenced your work?

Yes, I do. My parents always told me when I was growing up how amazed they were at how many different people came together to help them when they were in trouble and in need. There were so many people they never knew who helped behind the scenes.

I've always been interested in refugee issues. I felt the most connected between where I came from and what I do now was when I talked with families in Myanmar who were weighing whether they should stay where they were or resettle to the US. I would tell them that I was a refugee just like them and that I came from a place just like this. I would say that my family made that decision to come to the US, and they did it for us – the kids. My parents had a hard time. It wasn't easy at first, but America is our home. Sometimes, after I told them this, I could see hope in their eyes.

Mass. rights group faults Bangladesh on refugees

BOSTON - Tens of thousands of Burmese refugees are being forced into makeshift camps in Bangladesh and face widespread starvation unless they receive more humanitarian aid, according to an international human rights organization's report released Tuesday.

The Physicians for Human Rights, based in Massachusetts, faulted Bangladesh authorities for "arbitrary arrests, illegal expulsion, and forced internment" of Burmese refugees as neighboring Myanmar prepares for elections later this year. Since the 1990s, thousands of the refugees have made their way to Bangladesh from Myanmar, which had experienced unrest resulting from its military junta.
The report, "Stateless and Starving: Persecuted Rohingya Flee Burma and Starve in Bangladesh," also called the makeshift camps for unregistered refugees "open-air prisons" where children face severe malnutrition due to a lack of food aid and restricted movement outside of camps.
"The government of Bangladesh is absolutely ignoring it. They are sweeping it under the rug," said Richard Sollom, director of research and investigation for the group based in Cambridge, Mass. "Basically, it's the policy of the government that they simply want (the refugees) to disappear."
In addition, Sollom said Bangladesh authorities are preventing outside humanitarian aid to get to the refugees.
Abdul Momen, Bangladesh's representative in the United Nations, called that charge "totally false" and said government officials just have to make sure that any aid isn't coming from terrorist groups.

Rohingya refugees "starve to death" in Bangladesh

DHAKA: Bangladesh is waging a campaign of arbitrary arrest, illegal expulsion and forced internment against Muslim refugees from neighbouring Myanmar, according to a report released Tuesday.

Tens of thousands of unregistered Rohingya refugees, many of whom have lived in Bangladesh for decades, have been forced into makeshift camps where they are being left to starve to death, the report by Physicians for Human Rights said.

"It is unconscionable to leave this vulnerable population stateless and starving," said Richard Sollom, PHR director of research and investigations.

Described by the United Nations as one of the most persecuted minorities on earth, thousands of Rohingya from Myanmar's northern Rakhine state stream across the border into Muslim-majority Bangladesh every year.

Bangladesh recognises 28,000 Rohingya as registered refugees, who live in an official UN camp in Kutupalong. This figure is a fraction of the 200,000 to 300,000 unofficial refugees, according to government estimates.

The report said the crackdown is an apparent attempt to dissuade any further refugees fleeing to Bangladesh ahead of elections in Myanmar later this year.

The police are "systematically rounding up, jailing or summarily expelling these unregistered refugees across the Burmese border in flagrant violation of the country's human rights obligations," the report said. Burma is the former name for Myanmar.

The crackdown, which started January, has "quarantined" unregistered refugees in makeshift camps which surround the official UN-run facility, which the report said were effectively "an open air prison."

"This confinement, coupled with the Bangladeshi government's refusal to allow unregistered refugees access to food aid, presents an untenable situation: refugees are being left to die from starvation," it said.

The PHR report follows two other reports, one by lobby group the Arakan Project and one from Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) which also criticised the crackdown.

The Bangladeshi government on Sunday dismissed media reports relating to undocumented Myanmar nationals in Bangladesh as "baseless and malicious".

Bangladesh views the Rohingya as economic migrants and maintains they must be repatriated as soon as possible.

"We are arresting illegal Rohingya and pushing them back over the border. It is an ongoing operation," said Rafiqul Islam, chief of the local police in Kutuplaong on the Myanmar border.

- AFP/sc

International agency to setup KL office to address human trafficking

PUTRAJAYA, March 9 — The Geneva-based International Organisation for Migration (IOM) will open an office in Malaysia to address the issue of human trafficking in the country.
Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein said the Home Ministry has agreed to the step and the proposal will be discussed with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Cabinet.
IOM is currently housed within the United Nation’s High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR) building in Jalan Bellamy, Kuala Lumpur.
“I hope the setting up of the IOM office in Kuala Lumpur will assist KDN in our quest to address the issue of human trafficking, human smuggling and problems related to the issue of migration,” said Hishammuddin after a meeting with IOM director-general William Lacy Swing.
“In fact IOM has in principle agreed and willing to assist KDN in resolving the issue,” said Hishammuddin.
He added that IOM’s presence will also help in training agencies under the ministry.
“IOM has also proposed to train our investigation officers and prosecutors in cases involving human trafficking,” he said.
“I hope we will succeed in our attempt to eradicate human trafficking through our cooperation and the expertise of IOM,” said Hishammuddin.
IOM has offices in 127 countries with an annual budget of US$1.1 billion.
In June last year the United States put Malaysia on the list of countries suspected of not doing enough to combat human trafficking, together with six African countries — Chad, Eritrea, Niger, Mauritania, Swaziland and Zimbabwe.
Malaysia currently has about 1.8 million foreign workers.

Migrant Worker dies in Detention Centre in Alor Star

I received information that another Burmese Migrant dies in Detention Centre in Alor Star.

Name: San Oo
Body Number: 4630
Died on 3/3/2010


We recall that it was reported in the media in December 2008, that "About 1,300 illegal foreigners have died during detention in the past six years, Malaysia Nanban quoted Malaysian Human Rights (Suhakam) commissioner Datuk N. Siva Subramaniam as saying. He said many of them died in immigration detention centres, prisons and police lockups because they were denied medical treatment at the right time.” [Star, 18/12/2008, ‘1,300 foreign detainees died due to neglect’] This was again reiterated ABC News(28/5/2009) Malaysia detention centres 'violating rights' .The Bar Council tells us that, "...The Dewan Rakyat figure would mean that an average of one migrant dies in custody almost every day!" - Bar Council: Deaths of migrants in prisons, rehabilitation and detention centres
 
See earlier posts:-

Migrants eat grass...walk backfooted...and so they get sick and die...

No Za Bou, Women Migrant from Burma dies in KLIA Detention Centre - Could this death have been avoided with proper healthcare?

Minister of Health's lack of response shows a lack of accountability - Death of Migrants in Detention Centres by reason of Leptospirosis

Malaysian Trade Union Congress (MTUC) makes it 26 groups concerned about recent death of 6 Burmese in detention

2 migrants fell sick and died at the KLIA Immigration Depot. Could death have been avoided if the required healthcare was available?

126 groups:- Death of 2 Burmese Indicative of State of Detention Places in Malaysia - Denial of Healthcare Is a Violation of Right to Life 

* I have received a letter from the Ministry of Health recently, and I would try to post the same in this blog as soon as possible.

Burma refugees 'starving to death' in Bangladesh

Bangladesh is waging a campaign of arbitrary arrest, illegal expulsion, forced internment and starvation against Muslim refugees from neighbouring Myanmar, according to a report released Tuesday.

Tens of thousands of unregistered Rohingya refugees, many of whom have lived in Bangladesh for decades, have been forced into makeshift camps where they are being left to starve to death, the report by Physicians for Human Rights says.

"It is unconscionable to leave this vulnerable population stateless and starving," said Richard Sollom, PHR director of research and investigations.

In this picture taken in 2009, a Rohingya refugee child stands in the doorway of a shelter at an unregistered shelter in Kutupalong, some 400kms south-east of Dhaka. Bangladesh is waging a campaign of arbitrary arrest, illegal expulsion and forced internment against Muslim refugees from neighbouring Myanmar, according to a report by Physicians for Human Rights. (AFP/File/Munir Uz Zaman)
"Haiti after the recent earthquake had an acute child malnutrition rate of six percent, in the Rohingya camps the rate is 18.2 percent -- three times higher but with no aid," he added.

Described by the United Nations as one of the most persecuted minorities on Earth, thousands of Rohingya from Myanmar's northern Rakhine state stream across the border into Muslim-majority Bangladesh every year.

Bangladesh recognises 28,000 Rohingya as registered refugees, who live and receive aid at an official UN camp in Kutupalong. This figure is a fraction of the 200,000 to 300,000 unofficial refugees, according to government estimates.

The report said the crackdown is an apparent attempt to dissuade any more refugees fleeing to Bangladesh ahead of elections in Myanmar later this year.

The police are "systematically rounding up, jailing or summarily expelling these unregistered refugees across the Burmese (Myanmar) border in flagrant violation of the country's human rights obligations," the report said.

Up to 10,000 unregistered Rohingya, many of whom have lived in Bangladesh for years, have moved to the makeshift camps since January, local police say.

The crackdown has "quarantined" the unregistered refugees in the camps, which surround the official UN-run facility, and the report said they were effectively "an open air prison."

"This confinement, coupled with the Bangladeshi government's refusal to allow unregistered refugees access to food aid, presents an untenable situation: refugees are being left to die from starvation," it said.

The PHR report follows two other reports, one by lobby group the Arakan Project and one by Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders), which also criticised the crackdown.

"The European Union is very concerned at the humanitarian situation. For those with no access to any food programme, the situation is grim," MEP Jean Lambert, who led a recent visit to the refugee camps, told AFP.

The Bangladeshi government on Sunday dismissed media reports relating to undocumented Myanmar nationals in Bangladesh as "baseless and malicious."

It views the Rohingya as economic migrants and maintains they must be repatriated.

"We are arresting illegal Rohingya and pushing them back over the border. It is an ongoing operation," said Rafiqul Islam, chief of the local police in Kutupalong, on theMyanmar border.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100309/wl_sthasia_afp/bangladeshmyanmarrohingyarefugeesrights_20100309103610

Saturday, March 6, 2010

No Refuge

Sudanese war refugee Madhel Majok, 17, left, currently a high school student in Holliston, Mass., chats with friend Liberian war refugee Zakpa Wright at the foster home where Majok lives in Holliston, Mass., Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2010. As a 9-year-old orphan, Majok escaped the mass slayings and genocide of the Sudan that claimed his parents, then fled to neighboring Kenya where he survived vigilante shellings on his crowded refugee camp. In Kenya Majok remained in limbo for eight years while waiting for any country to grant him refuge. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Photo by: Steven Senne
  •  Sudanese war refugee Madhel Majok, 17, left, now a high school student in Holliston, Mass., programs music in his mobile phone at the foster home where he lives in Holliston, Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2010. As a 9-year-old orphan, Majok escaped the mass slayings and genocide of the Sudan that claimed his parents, then fled to neighboring Kenya where he survived vigilante shellings on his crowded refugee camp. In Kenya Majok remained in limbo for eight years while waiting for any country to grant him refuge. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
  •  Refugees from Myanmar Lian Sian Kim, 18, left, and his brother Lian Sian Sang, 16, prepare dinner at their foster home in Leicester, Mass., Friday, Jan. 29, 2010. The brothers fled Myanmar and hid in Malaysia after they were both wrongly accused by the military government of trying to sell a car, said Kim. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
  •  Refugees from Myanmar Lian Sian Kim, 18, left, and his brother Lian Sian Sang, 16, prepare dinner at their foster home in Leicester, Mass., Friday, Jan. 29, 2010. The brothers fled Myanmar and hid in Malaysia after they were both wrongly accused by the military government of trying to sell a car, said Kim. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
  •  Sudanese war refugee Madhel Majok, 17, left, now a high school student in Holliston, Mass., cooks dinner at the foster home where he lives in Holliston, Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2010. As a 9-year-old orphan, Majok escaped the mass slayings and genocide of the Sudan that claimed his parents, then fled to neighboring Kenya where he survived vigilante shellings on his crowded refugee camp. In Kenya Majok remained in limbo for eight years while waiting for any country to grant him refuge. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
(3) More Photos
*

Hiding from merciless militiamen and trekking through unforgivable mountainous terrain, Madhel Majok escaped the mass slayings and genocide of the Sudan that killed his parents. The 9-year-old orphan fled to neighboring Kenya, where he then survived vigilante shellings on his crowded refugee camp.
Majok remained in limbo for eight years while waiting for any country to grant him refuge.
Now 17, Majok has found safety in a small New England enclave 30 miles west of Boston. He's a star soccer player at Holliston High School, listens to Tupac and Biggie at his leisure and lives comfortably in a foster home, thanks to a federal program that matches refugee minors with American families.
"I like it. It's peaceful... quiet," said Majok, who wears American urban-style clothes and stays in a home with four other refugee Asian and African children. "Took me a long time to get here."
The U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement, which has 700 refugee children in foster care, has asked states to prepare to foster more international refugee children like Majok, whose parents either have disappeared or been killed by war or natural disaster. The need is heightened by continuing armed conflicts in Africa and recent events such as the earthquake in Haiti.
The request means that Massachusetts and other states must ask more households to open up their homes for foster care or ask existing foster families to take in another refugee child at a time of economic downturn.
"Between all the wars going on and all the (human) trafficking laws that have changed, more children are needing safe homes," said Sherrill Hilliard, the program manager for Refugee Immigration & Assistance Program in Washington. "And we're doing our best to find them."
Massachusetts, a state that historically has taken in one of the largest shares of the nation's unaccompanied refugee minors, has been asked to increase its current share of 93 to 125, said Richard Chacon, director of the Office for Refugees and Immigrants in Massachusetts.
The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services says 14 states and the District of Columbia, participate in the federal Unaccompanied Refugee Minor Program: Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Washington.
It is not the only way parentless refugee children can find safe haven in the U.S. The Obama administration, for example, recently said it will allow orphaned Haitian children to enter the U.S. temporarily on an individual basis. And some groups, like the Heartland Alliance in Illinois, help unaccompanied undocumented children by providing housing and legal representation.
The U.S. program, developed in the early 1980s to help thousands of parentless children in Southeast Asia, has aided more than 13,000 refugee children fleeing war, famine and economic turmoil. It remains the most consistent source for refugee children in the U.S., with the assistance of the United Nations.
In 2008, foster homes and related facilities in the United States and 67 other countries took in 16,300 orphans, according to Tim Irwin, the spokesman for the U.N.'s High Commissioner for Refugees. That's the highest number since the agency started keeping records, Irwin said.
In the U.S., states license foster homes with the help of the Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The federal government reimburses states for all costs of the children's schooling, health care and related expenses.
It's the same federal program that helped resettle 3,800 "Lost Boys" from Sudan in the early 2000s.
Cost of care for refugee minors varies, depending on need. In Massachusetts, the state Office for Refugees and Immigrants has budgeted about $3 million to serve 93 minors.
Arizona's State Refugee Coordinator Charles Shipman said his state has been asked to increase its numbers from 43 to 63. Arizona can find those new foster homes, Shipman said, but it's going to take some time.
"You have to work to develop more homes," Shipman said. "It's a pretty intense process to adequately serve these kids."
Hilliard said her state has been asked to double up from 50 to 100 children. "We've already got eight more on the way," she said.
Michelle and Peter Zimmerman, of Leicester, Mass., said they wanted their two sons, now 15 and 13, to know "how blessed they were."
After taking in Liberian refugee Sam Barclays, who later joined the U.S. Marines, the family was asked to consider fostering two refugee brothers who had escaped a prison in Myanmar. The boys fled Myanmar where they were wrongly accused by the military government of trying to sell a car, said Lian Sian Kim, 18.
The Zimmermans accepted.
In 2008, after living in hiding in Malaysia, Kim and his brother, Lian Sian Sang, 16, arrived at the Zimmermans' doorstep. "It was nice," said Kim, now a student at Leicester High School. "I didn't like the snow at first. But it's OK now."
A few months later, Majok arrived at the home of Paul Boulanger, a 68-year-old single father in Holliston, Mass., who has fostered three dozen refugee children in 30 years.
Boulanger also has teens living with him from the Congo, China and Myanmar. All are attending school, learning English and playing sports.
Gabriel Mugisha, 17, who escaped violence in the Congo with his siblings, said the only major conflict among the group is trying to decide what to eat for dinner.
"Refugees come to my door. I have an empty bedroom. Why not?" said Boulanger. "God put them here."

Burma Refugees' Travails Don’t End in Bangladesh

Burma Refugees' Travails Don’t End in Bangladesh

Bangkok. Stateless refugees from Burma are suffering beatings and deportation in Bangladesh, according to aid workers and rights groups who say thousands are crowding into a squalid camp where they face starvation and disease.

In a campaign that seems to have accelerated since October, the groups say, ethnic Rohingya refugees who have been living for years in Bangladesh are being seized, beaten and forced back to Burma, which they had left to escape persecution and abuse.

“Over the last few months we have treated victims of violence, people who claim to have been beaten by the police, claim to have been beaten by members of the host population, by people they’ve been living next to for many years,” said Paul Critchley, who runs the Bangladesh program for the aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres, also known as Doctors Without Borders.

“We have treated patients for beatings, for machete wounds and for rape,” he said, quoting a report issued on Thursday that describes the situation as a humanitarian crisis. Some had escaped after being forced into a river that forms the border with Burma. “This is continuing today.”

Since October, Critchley said, the unofficial Kutupalong makeshift camp with its dirt paths, flimsy shacks and open sewers has grown by 6,000 people to nearly 30,000, with 2,000 arrivals in January alone. They are among about 250,000 Rohingya in Bangladesh, a Muslim minority from Burma, where they do not have citizenship and cannot travel, marry or practice their religion freely, and are subject to abuse and forced labor.

Despite the hardships, people are continuing to flee repression and fear in Burma, and when they are deported, many return, several people said.

About 28,000 of them have been recognized by Bangladesh and documented as refugees. They receive food and other assistance in a camp administered by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and have not been subject to the abuses and forced returns described by other Rohingya, said Kitty McKinsey, a spokeswoman for the agency in Bangkok.

The government has not allowed the agency to register new arrivals since 1993.

Most Rohingya in Bangladesh have no documentation and struggle to survive, evading the authorities and working mostly as day laborers, servants or pedicab drivers. They have no rights to education or other government services.

“They cannot receive general food distribution,” Critchley said. “It is illegal for them to work. All they can legally do in Bangladesh is starve to death.”

The current crackdown is the worst they have ever suffered, according to reports from aid workers and the refugees themselves.

A risky route to a better life, by sea to Thailand and then to Malaysia for work, was cut off after the Thai Navy pushed about 1,000 Rohingya boat people out to sea last year to drift and possibly to drown.

More than a year later, more than 300 are known to be missing and more than 30 are confirmed to have died, Lewa said. No boats are reported to have landed in Thailand in the recent post-monsoon sailing season.

“The brutal push-backs and the continuous detention of the survivors seems to have stopped the Rohingya from doing it again,” said Chris Lewa, director of the Arakan Project, an advocacy group for the Rohingya.

“That horrible action has had the effect of basically stopping people from leaving.”

In Kutupalong, the situation at the camp is becoming desperate, aid workers and refugees said.

“We cannot move around to find work,” said Hasan, 40, a day laborer who lives with his wife and three children in a dirt-floored hovel made of sticks, scrap wood and plastic sheeting. He said he had no way to feed his family.

“There is a checkpoint nearby where they’re catching people and arresting them,” he told a photographer who visited recently. Like other refugees here, he asked that his last name not be used for fear of reprisals.

“We aren’t receiving any help,” he said. “Everybody’s in crisis now.”

The Rohingya know that they live at the very bottom of human society, that they are not wanted anywhere and that they are outsiders without legal standing or protection. Abdul, 69, who has lived in Bangladesh for more than 15 years, said that those thoughts disturbed his dreams.

“When I sleep I think that if someone kills an animal in the forest they are breaking the law,” he said. “But as human beings it isn’t the same for us. So where are our rights? I think to myself that we are lower than an animal.”



The New York Time

Peace monitors return to southern Philippines

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