Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Karen refugees seek safety guarantees


Karen youngsters play chinlone at a Thai-Burmese border refugee camp. (PHOTO: DVB)



The Karen Refugee Committee (KRC) has said that refugees on the Thai-Burmese border believe they can only return to their homeland when there is a guarantee of safety following a nationwide ceasefire.

The announcement comes as reports circulate that internally displaced persons and refugees will be repatriated while the peace talks are ongoing between ethnic armed groups and the Burmese government.

“The refugees need to be able to guarantee their own lives and safety,” said Blooming Night Zan, the joint general-secretary of the KRC.

On February 28, at an informal meeting, the KRC agreed to work together with the Karen State government on the issue of refugee repatriation.

Kyaw Soe Lin, a refugee from Umpium camp in Thailand’s Tak District, said the Thai border-based refugees are currently not interested in going home, citing fears for their safety.

Mae La refugee camp committee secretary Naw Day Day Poe told DVB that some refugees who earlier tried to go home to eastern Burma had returned to the refugee camps for various reasons of insecurity.

A resettlement programme to the United States was ended in January, and other third countries have also halted their intakes of resettled refugees from the Thai-Burmese border camps.

Around the end of last year, aid group The Border Consortium cut its food rations and educational support for the 120,000 mostly Karen refugees still at the border, said Kyaw Soe Lin.

Nonetheless, he said, most refugees require more incentives to return to their homes, specifically landmine clearances, rehabilitation projects, job creation schemes, and financial assistance to cover accommodation and food.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Richmond Hill Rotary donates to volunteer in Burma





The Rotary Club of Richmond Hill made a donation of $240 to Amelia Iaderosa to support her work on the Burmese border during their March 6 meeting

Club President Larry Barker presented a check to Iaderosa, aged 29. Iaderosa, who is originally from Richmond Hill, dressed in traditional Karen region clothes to receive the donation but also addressed the Rotary Club members about the challenging lives of refugees from the Karen region in Burma living in refugee camps on the Thailand/Burmese border.

The donation will support Iaderosa’s “Impacting Lives” campaign and will fund a full year of her cell phone expenses which is vital for her work overseas. Her campaign appeal is designed to pay for return travel to Thailand and fund basic living expenses for her unpaid work with the Karen Women’s Organization (KWO) for another year.

“KWO cannot afford to pay salaries or even expenses and the standard of living in this region is very low, even away from the refugee camps where the Karen people have been forced to live for many years,” she said. “I am humbled by the work that they do and while I am not changing the world I believe that I can play a small part in rebuilding the trust of refugees whose lives have been shattered. I am extremely grateful to Rotary, and everybody who has made a donation – however small – to help me return to work amongst these people.”

Anyone interested in helping sponsor Iaderosa’s work can find out more by visiting herwww.indiegogo.com/projects/impacting-lives.

International Women’s Day – Refugees Show Fear and Hope




Women from the largest refugee camp in Thailand’s express their concerns and dreams as the world marks international women’s day.

Naw Kaw, 44, a mother of three and a Karen refugee, sits down, shielding her face from the midday sun. She has been in Mae La refugee camp for two decades. She fled Burma after being used by the Burma Army as forced labor. Speaking to Karen News she said that she does not want to go back to Karen State.

“My dream is that our whole family goes to America to live. My oldest son who is 18 wants to go right now, but our application process for resettlement has already taken two years. He is getting more and more depressed that it is taking so long.”

Life in the camps can be tough, seven years ago an untreated eye infection left Naw Kaw blind in her right eye, but Naw Kaw said she felt safer as a mother raising her three children in the refugee camp than back in Burma.

“It can be hard – my husband works as a daily laborer to help us get by. Everyday he goes to find work, sometimes there is no work. He might earn one thousand baht per month, but it is better than Burma, there is no military here.”

Mae La refugee camp, one of three camps in Thailand’s Tak province and the largest in Thailand, is home to around 44,000 refugees, according to official statistics from The Border Consortium (TBC) that helps manage the camps.

Moo Say, 20, has just graduated from Post-10. A household leader in the camps, she is in charge of perhaps 100 houses, a considerable responsibility for someone so young.

“Young people in the camps are hard workers, but I am concerned that they don´t know how to survive into the future if we go back to Burma, they do not know how to farm, or have a livelihood or a full-time job.”

Switching from Karen to English, Moo Say said her dream was to become a highly qualified professional translator of Karen language and that she wanted to move to Australia.

“I do not want to go to Burma, and neither do my friends. Some of them want to go see Karen villages in Burma, but for them it is a curiosity, like as tourists, they, like me, were born in the camp and have never been to Karen State. I want to live in Australia but it can’t happen, I don’t have any relatives there, so I will try and move to the USA. I want to be a translator.”

Dirnar Chit, a middle-aged woman from Papun district, Karen State, chews beetle-nut and looks out from her small, bamboo shop inside the camp. A mother of a 6-year-old boy, she also looks after a 60-year-old woman with tuberculosis and a 14-year-old girl orphan.

“They came from the same village as me in Karen State, so I feel obligated to help them,” she said.

Dirnar Chit said she fled Karen State in 2007, because of conflict between the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA) and the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA).

“I had a niece in Mae La camp so I fled here when the fighting started.”
Dirnar Chit smiled, her teeth stained red by beetle-nut, and said that women could at least have a measure of financial independence in the camp, not found in Burma.

“I came with my life savings, just three thousand baht (US$30), and started a small shop to support myself and my family. On a good day I might earn 100 baht (US$3).”

Aye Myint, 19, smiled as she said she wanted to be a teacher in Thailand’s border area and live a ‘normal life’ like any Thai young person.

“I want to be a Thai citizen, not a citizen of Burma. I was born here in Mae La camp, in Thailand. There are no work opportunities for women in Burma and I am not used to living in the jungle.”

Aye Myint said that as a young woman she was worried about experiencing ethnic discrimination in Burma over issues like equal education for her children if she started a family. “I am worried about racism in Burma, ethnic hatred. The stories we hear from our parents from when they lived there leave us hating the idea of living in Burma.”

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Children of women migrants suffer In Malaysia

Migrants Are stuck in destination countries due to lack of travel documents

Plight of 300 children born to undocumented Nepali women migrants in Malaysia


HIMALAYAN NEWS SERVICE


KATHMANDU: More than 300 children born to undocumented Nepali women migrants in Malaysia are currently languishing in the Southeast Asian country due to lack of legal clarity on whether or not they should be issued documents to travel to Nepal with their mothers. 

According to the General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions (GEFONT), there are around 300-400 such children in Malaysia waiting for a legal passage to Nepal.

The problem arises when the migrant woman worker gets pregnant because the company for which she works does not allow her to work there and also refuses to allow her to stay at the company hostel. 

In most cases related to pregnancy, it has been noticed that women who are pregnant run away from the company and this makes her status illegal in the destination. Her problem further worsens if the father of the child is not a Nepali. 

“If the husband is not a Nepali national then the Nepali embassy cannot issue travel documents to the child because the issue of citizenship of the husband complicates matters,” said executive director at the Institute of Foreign Affairs who is also former ambassador to Malaysia Dr Rishi Raj Adhikari.

Adhikari also pointed out that if both the mother and father of the child are Nepalis then travel documents can be issued but they have to produce a birth certificate of the child. 

Regarding this, coordinator of GEFONT Support Group, Malaysia (Nepali Migrant Workers’ Association) Bed Kumar Khatiwada said: “Most women do not deliver their child in a hospital because her status at this point is illegal as she had run away from the company after being pregnant. Hence, she is unable to submit a birth certificate of the child in the embassy due to which the entire problem starts.”

Considering the intensity of the matter, member of foreign department (Migration Desk) GEFONT advocate Nisha Baniya opined that the state needs to address this case because a large number of its public (women migrant workers with their children) in many other destination countries including Malaysia are making rounds at the Nepali embassy seeking help.

All most every migrant working in Malaysia are facing the same problems with this situation and many clinics are offering them abortions for their profits and it costs RM 500 to 800.