Francis Wade
Guardian
February 26, 2013
Teenage victim describes how at least 13 women were raped overnight in Arakan state, which has been focus of ethnic riots
At least 13 women, including teenagers, have been subjected to prolonged rape by Burmese security forces in a remote village in the western state of Arakan. Human rights groups have warned that the incident threatens to trigger further violence in a region where several waves of ethno-religious rioting since June last year have killed more than 1,000 people.
The women all belong to the Muslim Rohingya minority, which has borne the brunt of fighting between Muslim and Buddhist communities. One victim, an 18-year-old girl who cannot be named for security reasons, described how a group of uniformed soldiers from Burma's border security unit, known locally as NaSaKa, entered her house in northern Maungdaw township shortly after midnight on 20 February.
"They took us separately to different places and tortured and raped us," she said, referring also to her mother and younger sister, 15. The ordeal lasted until dawn, she said. "They came in and out of the house at least 15 times. They also beat my mother with a gun and dragged her outside to the road and beat her to the ground."
According to the victim, 13 people in the village were assaulted. Chris Lewa, head of the Arakan Project, which has monitoring teams in Maungdaw township, said she had separately confirmed that at least 11 people were raped that night.
The incident comes eight months after the rape of a 26-year-old Buddhist woman by three Rohingya men triggered fierce rioting across Arakan state , and a state of emergency remains in place. Arakanese and Rohingya communities have clashed a number of times. Animosity toward the Muslim group is widespread among Arakanese, many of whom consider them to be illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
"Sexual violence by Nasaka against Rohingya women has been documented for many years," says Matthew Smith, a researcher with Human Rights Watch, adding that prosecutions are rare for rapes committed by security forces.
Khin Ohmar, founder of the Women's League of Burma, said that such ordeals terrorise the community. "I've heard of cases where rape survivors are kicked out of their village because the village head is so scared of retribution if they complain to the Burma army."
She said that incidents like these happen "every time the army moves into remote areas", and that punishment is normally just transferral to another area "where rape continues but with different women". She thinks that the 20 February incident probably had its roots in "ethno-centric chauvinism and hatred" of the Rohingya.
Following the attacks, villagers fled into nearby forests and across the border into Bangladesh, said Lewa. The victim told the Guardian that she and the other women had received treatment at a local clinic. The extent of their injuries is unclear, although one 19-year-old woman is believed to be in a critical condition.
The protracted violence in Arakan state has left deep scars for communities on both sides. The UN estimates the number of people displaced since June to be around 120,000, the majority Rohingya.
There are fears however that the violence, which initially pitted Rohingya against Arakanese, is increasingly being demarcated along religious lines. Rioting broke out in Rangoon this week after a row over what local Buddhists claimed was the illegal construction of a mosque. The Norway-based Democratic Voice of Burma news organisation also reported last week that the government had placed a ban on all Muslims leaving the Arakanese town of Thandwe, although no official statement has been made.
Buddhist and Muslim communities in Arakan state have now been segregated. In the state capital of Sittwe, all but one Muslim district was razed and emptied last year; the last remaining quarter, Aung Mingalar, whose population swelled from 5,000 to 8,000 residents after fighting broke out, is now guarded by soldiers.
Following a visit to several camps for the displaced this month, UN envoy Tomas Quintana spoke of his concern about aid distribution and freedom of movement. Despite government assurances that displaced Rohingya could eventually return to their homes, Quintana said that stakeholders in Arakan state believed "the current settlements will become permanent".
The medical charity Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) has warned that its staff have received threats from local Arakanese when attempting to get aid to the Rohingya. "It's just awful intimidation and threats of violence from a small but vocal group, through phone calls and on social media," said Peter Paul de Groote, Head of Mission for MSF in Burma.
"Formal permission for access is not the main problem. A big obstacle for MSF is not having enough staff – doctors and other essential personnel are scared to work in Rakhine [Arakan] state." He added that with monsoon season approaching, "we can expect a real humanitarian problem".
M.S. Anwar
RB News
February 26, 2013
Maung Daw, Arakan- Yesterday evening, a few militants from Arakan Liberation Party (ALP) brutally killed two innocent Rohingyas in the forest beside the village of Nurulla, Baggona Village tract, Maung Daw. They were killed while they together with other four people went for fishing in the streams of the forest.
“At 2PM yesterday, six Rohingyas from the village, Nurullah, went for fishing in the stream of the forest by the village. While they were fishing, around 12 terrorists from ALP came up and started firing at them. Two of them were mercilessly killed, whereas other four managed to escape the deaths. The profiles of the two killed Rohingyas are:
(1) Moahmmed Rashid S/o Lal Meah (32 years old)
(2) Mohammed Sayed S/o Amir Hamza (42 years old)
And the other four surviving victims are:
(1) Shomsul Anwar S/o Abul Bashar (40 years old)
(2) Lala S/o Nurul Johar (27 years old)
(3) Anwar Shar S/o (30 years old)
(4) Mohammed Ridhwan S/o Ali Johar (30-years old)
According to the surviving victims, the terrorists were in ALP Uniforms and could well identify the ALP terrorists. In the normal time, ALP terrorists pretend as if the local Rakhines and sometimes, they show their real colors. At the moment, with the help of Rakhine National Development Party (RNDP), there are many ALP terrorists roaming in the forests of Arakan including that of Maung Daw and increasing unrests and the violence against Rohingyas. And Myanmar government doesn’t seem to have a clue about the destructive roles that ALP terrorists are playing” said Rohingya from a nearby village on the condition of anonymity.
According to the surviving victims, the terrorists were in ALP Uniforms and could well identify the ALP terrorists. In the normal time, ALP terrorists pretend as if the local Rakhines and sometimes, they show their real colors. At the moment, with the help of Rakhine National Development Party (RNDP), there are many ALP terrorists roaming in the forests of Arakan including that of Maung Daw and increasing unrests and the violence against Rohingyas. And Myanmar government doesn’t seem to have a clue about the destructive roles that ALP terrorists are playing” said Rohingya from a nearby village on the condition of anonymity.
News Updates: Feb 26, 2013 17:45 GMT
"Today, authority came and investigated this matter. The villagers expect NaSaKa (Border Security Force) from the camp 15, commandment Area 5, to have submitted the correct reports to the higher authority.
But Maung Daw Police, consist of mainly Rakhine Extremists, instead of giving justice, is trying to sue back the four surviving victims for killing the other two."
RB News
February 26, 2013
Nobel peace prize winner Desmond Tutu arrived in Myanmar on Monday. According to the message posted by MP U Shwe Maung on Twitter, Tutu would give a speech at the American Centre in Yangon on Wednesday.
U Shwe Maung, Member of Parliament, Buthidaung constituency, Rakhine State, Myanmar, has sent a message to the Nobel Laureate Desmond Tutu via Twitter as follow:
Dear Honorable Nobel Peace Laureate,
Welcome to Union of Myanmar. Welcome to Rohingya Community of Myanmar. Rohingyas appreciate Reconciliation and love Peaceful Co-existence in Rakhine State. But they are suffering from Discrimination and Segregation. Consequences are very unpleasant and hair-raising. So, we are badly in need of a Conflict Resolution and Peaceful Co-existence Methodology, compatible for both Rakhine and Rohingya Communities. I would like to say "Rakhine and Rohingya is like Bolt and Nut". Bolt without Nut is unsecure and Nut without Bolt is unsecure. Similarly, Rakhine without Rohingya is unsecure and Rohingya without Rakhine is unsecure. Your advice and help is highly appreciated. I will attend your Speech Program in Yangon tomorrow. We look forward to hearing from you soon.
In search of Human Rights, Peace and Development,
Shwe Maung (a.k.a) Abdul Razak
MP for Buthidaung Constituency
Rakhine State, Myanmar
E-mail: ShweMaung.MP@gmail.com
Facebook: ShweMaung.MP
QS Madani
RB News
February 26, 2013
(Edited by Anwar Arkani)
Maungdaw: An investigation commission team that consists of five members led by U Maung Zaw Linn came from Sittwe to Alay Than Kyaw on February 17, 2013. They interviewed some Rohingyas: 2 youths, 2 women and 6 men.
The Rohingyas who were interviewed by the team were wanted by the following authorities. The hunting of the interviewees began as soon as the investigation commission left the village.
(1) U Aung Kyaw, Police Officer in Alay Than Kyaw Village
(2) U Kyi Hlaing, SaRaPha Head
(3) U Aung Naing Oo, NaSaKa Head of Sector (7)
(4) U Kyi Thein, Maungdaw Township Administrator
While the wanted Rohingyas are hiding to escape the arrest, searches by the authorities continue. It is almost certain that these unfortunate Rohingyas ultimately have to leave their homes and hearths.
On February 20, 2013, Rakhine racists led by head of the village U Khin Tun, U Maung Hla and U Tun Mra Ri from a Rakhine model village, Maw Ya Wadi, sent some Rakhine youths to the Mosque of War Chya village and Thaung Pinnyar village tract to pour poison in the pond of the mosque and its water source for tube pipe. By the time the villagers noticed, the Rakhine goons managed to escape the vicinity. These Rakhine goons are known for harassing Rohingyas from neighbouring villages.
Buthidaung: The NaSaKa from sub-camp (22) arrested the following 4 people from Razarbeel village tract, Buthidaung Township under various accusations on February 21, 2013. They were later released upon extracting ransom of 75,000 Kyats each.
(1) Hameed Hussein s/o Baru, 30
(2) Ali Akbar s/o Deen Mohammed, 22
(3) Molvi Rafique s/o Yusuf, 23
(4) Baru s/o Abdul Kareem, 55
On the following day, two Rohingyas from the same village, Sulaiman s/o Kalu, 40 and Nurul Islam s/o Nur Mohammed, 22 were brought to a Rakhine village, Keyareng Frang, village tract for carrying crops for Rakhine. When the security forces from battalion 536 met them, they were tortured severely by saying “Why did you go to Rakhine village”. Indeed the Rohingyas are confined in their villages all over Arakan.
The Rt Hon Baroness Warsi
Address at the High Level Segment of the Human Rights Council 22nd Session, Geneva
Monday 25 February, 2013
Introduction
1. Mr President, Madam High Commissioner
2. It is an honour to be here and to address such a distinguished audience.
3. Let me first thank the High Commissioner for her comprehensive and valuable speech. I would again like to voice the UK’s strong support for the work of your Office. And Madam High Commissioner, I am fully committed to ensuring your independence to continue to champion human rights across the globe.
4. I’m delighted to be here to share with you our ambitions for 2013 and to underline our commitment to the important work of the Human Rights Council. In this respect, I am immensely proud that the UK is standing for re-election to this Council in November this year.
Achievements in 2012
5. Last year was memorable for the UK. The London Olympic and Paralympic Games showcased our capital city and our sporting talent. We saw athletes from all around the world competing under the Olympic principles of equality and non-discrimination.
6. Human rights are based on the same principles of universality, inclusion and non-discrimination. We were therefore delighted to launch an agreement between Brazil, Russia and the Republic of Korea as future hosts of the Games to promote respect for human rights.
7. I see universality as one of the fundamental principles of human rights. That’s why I am a strong champion of the Universal Periodic Review. In May 2012, the UK approached its own review in a spirit of openness and transparency. We strive to be a powerful example of a country that upholds these rights, judging ourselves by the highest standards and taking corrective action where we fall short. The UPR’s real strength is in giving and receiving genuine and thoughtful feedback.
8. That’s why I encourage all states to engage constructively. And why we will again present a cross regional statement on improving the UPR this session with partners Brazil and Morocco.
9. And last year we continued to champion issues where greater international focus and leadership is needed. Preventing Sexual Violence in conflict is one such example.
10. We in Britain think that the international community must do more to protect victims. Do more to prevent the use of rape and sexual violence in conflict. Provide better support to survivors. And end the culture of impunity for these crimes.
11. This has got to stop.
12. The Foreign Secretary is leading the charge on this campaign, including during the UK’s G8 Presidency.
Ambitions for 2013
13. In 2013, as in 2012, we face another challenging year.
14. The atrocities in Syria remain foremost in our minds. We cannot stand by and allow this situation to continue.
15. I want to be clear. Those responsible for the worst violations and abuses must be held to account, including through the International Criminal Court.
16. That’s why I strongly support the work of the UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria.
17. I remain extremely concerned about reports of systematic and widespread human rights abuses in DPRK, particularly the continued use of political prison camps. During this Council, the EU and Japan will present a resolution which will call for an end to these abhorrent practices.
18. I fully support that aim. We urgently need an independent investigation into the most severe human rights violations, supporting the work of the Special Rapporteur.
BURMA
19. While I recognise the real progress made in Burma, I echo the calls of the Special Rapporteur for the government to translate its positive commitments on human rights into action.
20. We are very conscious of the problems in Rakhine State. Our Minister of State for Asia, Hugo Swire, visited Rakhine in December and was one of the first Western ministers to do so. And only last week, I visited the Rohingya camps in Cox’s Bazaar in Bangladesh.
21. There is a desperate need for stronger security and more effective coordination of all humanitarian assistance and work to address impunity. But most importantly the Burmese government needs to resolve the issue of Rohingya citizenship.
22. In Kachin State, I am encouraged by the recent reduction in fighting and agreement by both sides to pursue political dialogue in the context of a wide process of national reconciliation. We will support this. That’s why I hope the government will sign a host country agreement and open a country office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
23. Sri Lanka will continue to attract a huge amount of attention both in my own country and others. The discussion at this Council will be in the spirit of support towards reconciliation in Sri Lanka. But the task now is to make concrete progress. Implementing the Lesson Learned and Reconciliation Commission will be a crucial step towards improvement in Sri Lanka’s human rights record.
24. On Iran, the British government strongly supports a renewal of the mandate for the Special Rapporteur. We remain concerned by the serious and widespread violations perpetrated by the Iranian government.
25. As last year, the UK’s focus in 2013 will also extend to thematic concerns that affect individuals globally.
26. Such as the promotion of Freedom of religion or belief. I do not believe that this debate is polarised. As a British Muslim, I cannot accept that this is a dividing line between the West and the rest of the world.
27. I believe we can build a shared understanding of what needs to be done to protect the right to freedom of religion or belief for all, and to combat intolerance. I am sure that we can all also agree that innocent lives lost through violence, whatever the provocation, cannot be right.
28. As Minister for Human Rights it’s a topic that I have made a priority and I give my personal commitment to working hard towards achieving consensus. That’s why I held a cross regional meeting of Ministers in London last month. Because through strong political leadership, I think we can bring about long term change in attitudes and behaviour.
Britain’s election to the Council
29. I hope you can see from our commitment that UK wants to play an active role in the Council. Progress in all these areas requires a vocal, active and ambitious Human Rights Council. Through leadership, focus and diligence we can continue to strengthen this important body. We depend on its members to be bold and to hold to account those who commit the most serious violations, wherever they occur.
30. The UK is once again standing for election to the Human Rights Council because of our longstanding commitment to human rights, because of our belief in the UN human rights system, and because of our genuine ambition to promote and protect human rights around the world.
Conclusion
31. I believe that UK support can make a difference in the areas I have highlighted today, and in so many others.
32. But we all have a responsibility to protect those who are more vulnerable.
33. It is in the hands of the Human Rights Council to ensure that the highest standards of fundamental rights and freedoms are realised for each and every person wherever they may be.
34. Thank you Mr President, Madam High Commissioner.
AFP
February 25, 2013
KHAO LAK, Thailand: Homeless, hungry and nine months pregnant, Nuru boarded a rickety boat filled with Rohingya asylum seekers fleeing a wave of deadly sectarian violence in western Myanmar.
Six days later she gave birth at sea, far from any hospitals or doctors.
Since Buddhist-Muslim tensions exploded last June in Myanmar’s Rakhine State, thousands of Rohingya boat people – including a growing number of women and children – have joined an exodus from the former junta-ruled country.
Those who arrived in neighbouring Thailand have been “helped on” by the Thai navy towards Malaysia further south or detained as illegal immigrants.
Hundreds are feared to have drowned along the way while others were rescued as far away as Sri Lanka.
Denied citizenship by Myanmar, where they have suffered decades of discrimination and persecution, they left behind a country where they were never wanted – only to find they are unwelcome elsewhere.
“After my house was burned down I had nowhere to live and no job,” Nuru, 24, told AFP at a government-run shelter in southern Thailand, cradling her month-old baby boy in her arms.
Even though she was on the verge of giving birth, Nuru decided to make the long and dangerous journey in the hope of reaching Malaysia.
After just a few days at sea, the food and water ran out.
“We had to drink sea water and we got diarrhea,” said Nuru. Some fishermen took pity on them and gave them water, fish and fuel.
Finally, two weeks after leaving Rakhine, their flimsy vessel reached an island off Thailand’s Andaman Coast after a near 1,500 kilometre (900 miles) journey. But their ordeal was not yet over.
The men were separated from their families and sent to detention centres, while the women and children were confined to the shelter in Khao Lak, a popular beach resort just north of the tourist magnet of Phuket.
“They looked terrible. Some of the children drank sea water and had diarrhea. They vomited and it was full of worms. They looked very scared and upset,” said a worker at the shelter, which houses about 70 women and children.
“The journey was very difficult for the pregnant women. They must have been really suffering to come here,” said the shelter worker, who did not want to be named.
Some children even made the dangerous journey alone without any relatives, leaving behind a country where they were born and raised — but viewed by the Burmese majority as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants.
“My father is disabled so I need to go to Malaysia. I have relatives – an uncle – in Malaysia,” said Abdul Azim, 12, whose home was burned and mother killed in the Rakhine unrest.
The boy, whose name AFP has changed to protect his identity, is one of about 1,700 Rohingya – including more than 300 women and children – detained by Thailand in recent months.
“These people are desperate and that’s why we see not just men and boys but now also women and small children fleeing as well,” said Phil Robertson, Asia deputy director at New York-based Human Rights Watch.
“It’s something that indicates that there is a very, very serious problem in Arakan (Rakhine) state that the government of Burma needs to attend to urgently.”Officials say those already in Thailand will be kept for six months in detention while the government works with the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) to try to find other countries willing to accept them.
“Thailand itself cannot carry the burden,” said Thai foreign ministry official Manasvi Srisodapol.
“We don’t want them to risk danger every year travelling at the sea like this, so we’d like to see a better environment for them in their country of origin.”At one detention centre in Phang Nga near Phuket, 275 Rohingya men are held in crowded conditions, denied access to their families. Some have been treated for illnesses including malaria, chickenpox and tuberculosis.
One detainee whispered through the bars to a visiting AFP journalist that the men hoped to go to America or Malaysia.
Hundreds of others have been blocked by the Thai navy from entering the kingdom as part of a new crackdown that began after allegations emerged that Thai army officials were involved in the trafficking of Rohingya.
In Myanmar, more than 100,000 people have been displaced by the Rakhine clashes, which have overshadowed a series of widely praised political reforms by a nominally civilian government which took office in early 2011.
The government says about 180 people have been killed, but activists fear the real death toll is much higher.
Myanmar’s population of roughly 800,000 Rohingya – described by the UN as one of the most persecuted minorities on the planet – face travel restrictions, forced labour and limited access to healthcare and education.
Bangladesh used to be the destination of choice for those fleeing the country, but it has since closed its border to the Rohingya.
Now many want to go to Muslim Malaysia, where the UNHCR has already registered almost 25,000 Rohingya, although community leaders estimate actual number could be double that.
Malaysia largely turns a blind eye, allowing them into the country but denying them any sort of legal status that would allow access to healthcare, education, jobs, and other services, activists say.
The UN estimates that last year about 13,000 boat people fled Myanmar and Bangladesh. Few who reach Thailand want to stay permanently, preferring to join relatives elsewhere.
“I’m not happy here. I will be happy if I can go Malaysia,” said Abdul Azim.
Skanda Gunasekara
Sunday Times
February 25, 2013
A severely persecuted minority in Myanmar which fears repatriation while no other country wants them
The Government is burdened with the task of feeding and clothing 70 Rohingya people whom no country wants to accept as their citizens. The 68 men and two boys aged 12 and 14 years are from the State of “Rohang” in Myanmar, and are commonly referred to as Rohingya Muslims. The United Nations (UN) says they are one of the most persecuted minority people in Myanmar, and many have fled across the border to either Bangladesh or Thailand. The Sino-Tibetans are the majority population in Myanmar.
The first batch of 37 Rohingya people have remained in the Mirihana Detention Centre since February 2, Controller General of Immigration and Emigration told the Sunday Times. A further batch of 33 was lodged there a week ago, following their rescue from the high seas, he said. The Centre comes under his purview.
These “people with nowhere to go” are clothed and fed at State expense, until relevant State agencies work to resolve their citizenship status. An External Affairs Ministry (EAM) source who spoke on grounds of anonymity, said they had raised issue with the Myanmar embassy in Colombo about the status of the 70 persons. “We have had no response to our first inquiry about the 37 or the 33 who were rescued thereafter,” he said. Hence, the EAM brought the matter to the attention of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. Other diplomats in Colombo said the move was not surprising, as the Yangon government did not recognise the Rohingyas.
UNHCR’s acting resident representative in Colombo, Jenniger Pagonis told the Sunday Times, “we have now sought permission to interview those in detention. This is to determine whether they are indeed Myanmar nationals. However, we have learnt from other accounts, that they do not wish to return to their country.”
The saga of the 33 “persons with nowhere to go” came after the Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) received a radio signal that a fishing craft had rescued a fisherman from a boat in distress. SLN spokesman P.K. Warnakulasuriya said “We immediately dispatched SLNS Sagara, and rescued 32 persons from the high seas, 250 nautical miles off Sri Lanka’s east coast, returning to Galle after a nine-and-half-hour voyage.” The survivors were then handed over to the Police.
The Police found they had a communications problem, as none of them spoke English. Helping out was the Ven. Maligawila Assagi Thera of the Gnanobasa Temple at Lower Dickson Road, Galle, acting as interpreter, through whom the Police were able to piece together a story with several gaps.
Only a few among the 33 spoke a little Burmese. They told Ven. Assagi that their boat began to drift after the engines failed. They had food stocks only for a month, but they had drifted for a further five weeks. Whenever someone died, they had thrown the body overboard. The count was 98 including two organisers of the voyage. While some claimed they were headed for Malaysia, it was later established that their destination was Australia.
Ven Assagi Thera told the Sunday Times, “the survivors are all labourers with Grade 4 education at most. After leaving Myanmar, they claimed they were spotted by the Thai Navy, forcing them to change course. They had planned to complete their voyage in 20 to 25 days.”
Galle Magistrate U.S. Kalansuriya ordered the 17 survivors sent to the Detention Centre, when produced by the police. “Our role was over when we sent them to the Centre,” Police spokesman Senior Superintendent Prashantha Jayakody said. On February 2, the SLN rescued another 138 persons from the high seas, of who, 37 were Rohingyas.
(Additional reporting by D.G.Sugathapala)
Vitit Muntarbhorn
Bangkok Post
February 25, 2013
Although the term "Rohingya" is subject to various interpretations, it has been used in recent times primarily to cover the ethnic Muslim minority found in Myanmar's Rakhine State. Rohingya have sadly been in the news because of the violence, discrimination, dispossession and marginalisation to which they have been subjected. The depth of their tragedy cries out for a robust helping hand from their state of origin and the international community.
Their persistent plight invites deeper understanding of their situation. First, it should be noted that their status in Myanmar was not adequately dealt with at the time of Burma's (later Myanmar) independence. In effect, many of them are stateless. The 2008 constitution of the country perpetuates their marginalisation by providing that a citizen is either a person "born of parents both of whom are nationals of the Republic of Myanmar" or "a person who is already a citizen by law on the day this constitution comes into operation". This is compounded by the 1982 Myanmar Citizenship Law which fails to list Rohingya as a "national ethnic group" entitled automatically to Myanmar citizenship, even though it recognises other national ethnic groups for this purpose.
Second, for decades, the group has suffered impediments to their rights and livelihood. They are some of the poorest people in the country. There are recurrent breaches of their right to freedom of movement, access to education, freedom of religion and even their right to marry. Matters came to a head in 2012 with widespread inter-ethnic violence in Rakhine State, causing a massive caseload of internally displaced persons, including Rohingya, and their most recent cross-border outflows into neighbouring countries by land and sea.
To be fair, however, the plight of other victims of violence in Rakhine State should not be forgotten. The authorities have also set up a national Commission of Inquiry on the issue.
Meanwhile, the UN Special Rapporteur on Myanmar remains concerned with the serious situation in Rakhine State, despite constructive developments on other fronts in the country.
Third, precisely because old caseloads of Rohingya who sought refuge in neighbouring countries, particularly during the mid 1970s and 1990s, have not been fully dealt with, those neighbours find it difficult to keep open the door to new arrivals.
For instance, in Bangladesh, while many have been assisted and have found solutions to their plight, including voluntary repatriation to their country of origin, others are in limbo and await long-term solutions. This creates a sense of compassion fatigue at the local level. The situation is rendered more complex by the fact that there is a local Rohingya community, as distinct from the Rohingya who are seeking refuge in Myanmar, and some of the local community are also seeking access to other countries.
Fourth, the past two years have witnessed large influxes into neighbouring Thailand and Malaysia (and other countries). The response facing Rohingya has been ambivalent. While tens of thousands have now found refuge in Malaysia and hundreds have been sheltered in Thailand, others have been subjected to push-backs and push-outs, particularly at sea as a kind of "soft deportation". There are fears of forced return to their country of origin, though this would be in breach of the international law principle of "non-refoulement" which prohibits the forced return of asylum-seekers to areas of danger, particularly their country of origin. Thailand is also a party to the UN Convention against Torture which prohibits absolutely the forced return of persons to areas where there is a fear of torture. However, on a welcome note, some of the more enlightened officials have urged safety and temporary shelter for the refugees, while civil society groups have shown kindness towards them.
Fifth, the outflow of Rohingya from Myanmar is blighted by criminal elements seeking to profit from them. Often, those who seek refuge elsewhere are victims of human trafficking _ a phenomenon leading them to a situation of exploitation whether or not they cross a border _ and victims of human smuggling whereby a third party helps them to cross the border to enter another country illegally or in an irregular manner. The gravity of the situation is highlighted by the fact that in recent months many of the victims have been women and children. The challenge is to ensure that they are not kept in detention but are cared for in welfare facilities and treated as victims rather than illegal immigrants.
On an auspicious front, even though most Southeast Asian countries are not parties to the UN Convention on the status of refugees, they are all parties to the UN conventions on the rights of women and children which advocate non-discrimination and humane treatment of all women and children irrespective of their origins. The most recent regional declaration on human rights _ the Asean Human Rights Declaration _ also refers to the possibility of asylum, even though that declaration has been criticised on some fronts.
From the angle of regional dialogue and related action, there is now a forum known as the Bali Process on People Smuggling, Trafficking in Persons and Related Transnational Crime, which acts as a platform to involve scores of countries in the search for solutions. This includes all the Asean countries as well as key neighbours such as Bangladesh, India and China, as well as other key actors such as the US, Australia and New Zealand. This process has established a regional office in Bangkok and it meets periodically to promote cross-border cooperation.
In 2011, it adopted a Regional Cooperation Framework to counter the irregular movement of people due to human smuggling, as well as to address the issue of asylum-seekers, with the possibility of assessment processes to determine their status. The latter is linked to the possibility of a variety of solutions, such as voluntary repatriation, resettlement within and outside the region, and "in country" solutions. Logically also, the main UN body dealing with refugees and the issue of statelessness _ the office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) _ is a key catalyst on these issues and is interlinked with the Bali Process, anchored on the need to ensure consistency with international law.
With regard to the Rohingya and other displacements, key actions premised on the need for robust international cooperation should include the following:
- Address the root causes of the conflict and displacement in Myanmar, including overcoming the marginalisation of the Rohingya community, to protect human rights, and to ensure sustainable development and poverty alleviation;
- Reform the citizenship law in the country and adopt more flexible criteria for the granting of nationality (such as by reason of birth in the country), as well as residency and travel documents based on the freedom of movement and return to the country;
- Provide humanitarian assistance to victims of violence in the country on the basis of non-discrimination;
- Keep open the borders of neighbouring countries to help victims of persecution, violence and conflict, with due respect for international principles such as "non-refoulement" and rescue at sea for boat arrivals, while countering human trafficking and smuggling;
- Provide at least temporary shelters for persons who seek refuge, avoid detaining them, and ensure that they have access to humanitarian bodies such as the UNHCR;
- Initiate a process to determine the status of those who seek refuge in these countries; where there are grounds to believe that they have escaped persecution, violence or conflict, they should be able to stay at least temporarily and have access to durable solutions; in regard to cases which do not pass this test, the main option is for them to return to their country of origin, preferably on a voluntary basis;
- Maximise international and regional responsibility-sharing by providing sustained support to the countries caring for persons who seek refuge; and
- Nurture mutual understanding and cooperation by means of inter-community programmes and activities, particularly from a young age and with due regard to the rich diversity and humanity of cultures and peoples in the region.
Vitit Muntarbhorn is a Professor at the Faculty of Law, Chulalongkorn University. He has helped the UN in a variety of capacities, including as a consultant, expert and Special Rapporteur.
Dr. Yasmin Haroon
RB Poem
February 24, 2013
The Chase
Terrified, I run with all my might into the wild,
Deeply heaving and profusely perspiring,
Moist sparse my forehead and,
Sweat-drops streak down the temporal sides,
Of my hot, flushing skin.
I hear them, swearing, cursing and hurling loud with immense rage,
Echoing all around clearly.
Unable to keep up with my pace,
They are infuriated and feel threatened.
How many of them, I can’t tell,
What and how many weapons they carry, I can’t guess.
To save my life is all I’m determined for,
And those who are utterly helpless without me.
I'm uncertain for how long I am running,
I lose the track of time through the chase.
How far are my people and village, I can’t speculate.
I see the sun dimly shining through the wild withered branches,
Slowly fading into the earth's vast horizon.
My body is feeble and weary,
Excruciating pain, I suffer all over.
But I can’t recede,
I can’t give up now,
I have no choice,
But to keep running towards my people.
Or suffer at the hands of the tyrants,
My beloved and I.
They are not far behind me,
Portraying the same substantial commitment to have me killed,
As I am to defeat their conviction.
My skin is bruised against the sharp ends of the forest
And my naked feet are pricked by aged thorns,
I hasten my pace as the darkness engulfs the wilderness.
Eerie and unpleasant thoughts cloud my mind,
Feeding on such would only slow me down.
Even though arduous, I recall on memories,
That of my family and the happier times.
Heightening my spirit and hope,
A subtle idea draws into my mind,
To cause diversion and get them off track....
But, I was too late.
I was approaching my village.
Hot and dusty air brush against my blossom,
And dark smoke swirl towards the open sky.
I’m late....indeed, very late.
Surrounded by what it would be to describe as Hell,
Rubble and ruins at every corner.
My family were tied up with ropes,
Just like they would do the untamed,
Innocent were not spared.
Our homes were blazing with fire.
Silently weeping with heads down,
Inductive that we have lost our fight against the brutal oppressors.
Witnessing what I have dreaded the most,
I fall to my knees and my eyes fill up.
I do not resist nor do I run again.
This is not just the end,
But a beginning of remembering us as part of History.
I silently sigh and give in to my tormented fate..
I’m not a martyr,
And neither do I desire to be celebrated as one in the far future.
Heed what I say and be assured,
With each life scarified,
The zeal to win our lawful freedom,
Will only head stronger and stronger...
Dr. Yasmin Haroon is senior medical intern at Gulf Medical University in UAE and is a native Rohingya.
M.S. Anwar
RB News
February 24, 2013
Maung Daw, Arakan- Starting from early morning yesterday, a joint operation by Police, NaSaKa (Border Security Force), SB2 (Special Branch Two) and others was carried out against Rohingya Passers-by in Maung Daw. More than 250 Rohingya passers-by Children, Men and Women were arrested and detained for no reason.
“From the early morning, three joint teams of Police, NaSaKa, SB2 and others encamped at three NaSaKa Camps in Maung Daw. The three NaSaKa camps are at Mayong Khali (Khala) Bridge, MyoThuGyi (Khala) Bridge and ShujaFara (Taak Khali) Bridge located respectively before the three entries to the downtown of Maung Daw. Then, they suddenly popped up and started arbitrarily arresting Rohingya Passers-by including children, women and men alike. More than 250 people were taken to the police custody in Maung Daw and kept in detentions where they were harassed. Later, they were released after extorting some amount of money from each of the detainee. Meanwhile, some of the detainees who had the White Cards (the Foreigners Registration Cards Issued to Rohingyas long ago) with them did not need to pay money for their release.
On 21st February 2013, U Hla Maung Tin, a Rakhine extremist himself and the head of the Rakhine State Administration, held separate meetings with Maung Daw Administration and other authority, Rakhine community and the religious heads of Rohingya Community. While what he discussed with Rakhine community and Maung Daw administration are not known, he discussed with the religious heads of Rohingyas on how to stabilize the regions and that too in a very nice way. He reportedly said that the violence had taken place accidentally and Rohingyas would not be the subject of the atrocities any more.
Now, Rohingyas suspect that the intention behind his coming to Maung Daw was to carry out the operations often and play mind games in order to cause terror in the minds of Rohingyas as a part of their psychological war tactics” said a Rohingya Elder from Maung Daw.
It is the critically final moment for Rohingya people in exile, international communities and government bodies to prepare for the effective actions to prevent the genocides of Rohingyas and Kamans rather than mere holding dialogues with the Burmese tyrants. Burmese regime has always been deaf to any genuine dialogues for peace. They never want peace for the different people and always lie after committing atrocities.
Susan Sacirbey
Diplomaticallyincorrect.org
February 23, 2013
Child soldiers, genocide, ethnic hatred, Rohingya Muslims, Kachin Christians, cronyism, corruption, have all become names associated with Myanmar, or as some call – “Burma.” This week alone, there were two seemingly conflicting reports coming from the UN, one associating unaddressed human rights issues, the second – the release of 24 child soldiers by the Tatmadaw, Myanmar’s armed forces.
Ongoing conflict between ethnic Rakhine Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims has created 115,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Rakhine State. Despite reforms claimed by the Government, there is fear of spreading violence to other parts of Myanmar. There are also concerns of excessive government force and human rights abuse, which have all contributed to the number of Rohingya fleeing the country by boat in unsafe vessels many drowning at sea to escape indignity and fear at home.
Relief supplies continue to be stymied by authorities and logistics to afflicted areas, and medical conditions worsen. At the same time, the Tatmadaw’s action plan to end and prevent child use and recruitment is a welcome development. The Government has agreed to: “Identify all children in the Tatmadaw and ensure their unconditional release/discharge; facilitate the reintegration of released children into their families and communities; and facilitate processes that seek to end child recruitment by non-State armed groups.”
With greater Government transparency, accountability, and genuine reform and human rights measures to respect all Myanmar’s ethnicities and religions, we may be witness to new images of hope among Myanmar’s children. As Global Citizens, let’s change the picture.
UN News Centre Sources
“The reforms in Myanmar are continuing apace, which is a good sign for the improvement of the human rights situation in Myanmar,” said the Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in the country, Tomás Ojea Quintana, after his latest visit. However, he warned that “there are significant human rights shortcomings that remain unaddressed.”
Mr. Ojea Quintana called on authorities to address the issues of truth, justice and accountability through the creation of a truth commission, adding that this is crucial for the process of national reconciliation and to prevent future human rights violations.
During his five-day trip, Mr. Ojea Quintana visited Naypyitaw, Yangon, Kachin and Rakhine, and met with Government officials, the National Human Rights Commission, civil society and former prisoners of conscience, among others. He also met with Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, the Chairperson of the National League of Democracy.
The Special Rapporteur said he was particularly concerned by the escalation of military offensives in Kachin, where some 75,000 people have fled their homes since fighting began in June 2011 between Government troops and rebels.
Security issues in the state are also hindering humanitarian access, and Mr. Ojea Quintana stressed that all administrative and political obstacles should The living conditions of some 120,000 people who are living in internally displaced camps are especially worrying, the expert said, without adequate health care in the larger Muslim camps.
On 18 February, 2013, The United Nations welcomed the release of 24 children by Myanmar’s armed forces, known as the Tatmadaw, and called for the acceleration of discharges in line with the commitment made last year by the Government to end child rights violations.
Last June, the UN and the Government of Myanmar signed an action plan that sets a timetable and measurable activities for the release and reintegration of children associated with Government armed forces, as well as the prevention of further recruitment.
According to a news release issued by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the 24 children were officially discharged at a ceremony on Friday in Yangon, attended by senior officials of the Tatmadaw and the Government, as well as the UN.
“This release of 24 children is a welcome step in the implementation of the action plan by the Government and reflects its commitment that children should not, and will no longer, be recruited and used for military purposes,” stated UN Resident Coordinator in Myanmar Ashok Nigam. “I call for the acceleration of the release of all children from the Tatmadaw and for the non-State armed groups to also do the same,” he added.
Myanmar is one of 14 countries – with armed forces or armed groups identified by the UN Secretary-General as committing grave child rights violations – working together with the UN system to end grave violations against children in situations of armed conflict.
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| (Photo - Sri Lanka Navy) |
The News Pakistan
February 23, 2013
YANGON/GENEVA: Myanmar boat survivors rescued by Sri Lanka’s navy last week say they floated for 25 days at sea and 97 people died of starvation after Thailand’s navy intercepted and forcibly removed their boat’s engines.
Thirty-two men and a boy now detained at an immigration detention centre near Sri Lanka’s capital, Colombo, were rescued last Saturday when their dilapidated wooden vessel began sinking while making a perilous journey to Malaysia. The Thai navy has denied the allegation.
The survivors are Rohingya Muslims regarded as illegal immigrants into Myanmar from Bangladesh, and say they do not want to return to Myanmar.
The survivors were suffering from severe dehydration when they were rescued about 250 miles off Sri Lanaka’s east coast.’
Meanwhile, the UN’s refugee agency on Friday raised the alarm over the rising number of boat people perishing in the Indian Ocean, including Rohingya Muslims fleeing communal strife in Myanmar.
“It is clear that for people fleeing violence and conflict in their homelands, this has become one of the most dangerous stretches of water in the world,” said UNHCR spokesman Andrej Mahecic.
In 2012, some 13,000 people took to smugglers’ boats in the Bay of Bengal, of whom 500 died at sea when the vessels broke down or capsized, said Mahecic.
“Already in 2013, several thousand people are believed to have boarded smugglers boats in the Bay of Bengal,” he added.
Among the most recent incidents, around 90 people are believed to have died of dehydration and starvation during a two-month journey, he said.
Around 30 survivors were rescued last weekend by Sri Lanka’s navy off that country’s coast.
“The repeated tragedies at sea demonstrate the need for a coordinated regional response to distress and rescue at sea,” said Mahecic.
Described by the UN as among the most persecuted minority groups in the world, Myanmar’s Muslim Rohingya have for years trickled abroad to neighbouring Bangladesh and, increasingly, to Muslim-majority Malaysia.
Myanmar views its population of roughly 800,000 Rohingya as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants and denies them citizenship.
Buddhist-Muslim unrest has left at least 180 people dead and more than 110,000 displaced in Myanmar’s western state of Rakhine since June 2012.
UNHCR
February 22, 2013
This is a summary of what was said by UNHCR spokesperson Andrej Mahecic – to whom quoted text may be attributed – at the press briefing, on 22 February 2013, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.
UNHCR is concerned about a rising numbers of deaths in the Indian Ocean involving people fleeing their countries for safety and better lives elsewhere. This includes many Rohingya from Myanmar.
Already in 2013, several thousand people are believed to have boarded smuggler's boats in the Bay of Bengal, among them Rohingya from Rakhine state or from Bangladesh's refugee camps and makeshift sites. Most are men, but there are also increasing reports of women and children on these often-rickety boats making the journey southwards. We estimate that of the 13,000 people who left on smugglers' boats in 2012, close to 500 died at sea when their boats broke down or capsized. While UNHCR is still gathering data from 2012 on deaths at sea, it is clear that the Indian Ocean has become for people fleeing their countries one of the deadliest stretches of water in the world.
In the latest incident, only a week ago, some 90 people – believed to be Rohingya – are said to have died of dehydration and starvation during a journey that lasted almost two months. More than 30 survivors were rescued from this vessel last weekend by the Sri Lankan navy off Sri Lanka's east coast. Earlier in February, around 130 people reportedly originating from Myanmar and Bangladesh – were also rescued at sea by the Sri Lankan navy. We are seeking independent access to the survivors to assess their situation and needs.
UNHCR is greatly saddened by this latest terrible ordeal, and commends the quick action of the Sri Lankan navy in rescuing this group and providing immediate medical attention. UNHCR is ready to support the Sri Lankan authorities in assisting any among them who are in need of international protection.
Violence in western Myanmar's Rakhine state erupted last June between different communities there. Since then some 115,000 people – the majority of them Rohingya – have been uprooted. Most continue to be internally displaced within Rakhine state, but others have resorted to smugglers to flee their country.
About 1,700 people have arrived in recent months on the southern coast of Thailand, where the Royal Thai Government has granted them six months of temporary protection until solutions can be found. UNHCR teams are talking to the men, who are held in detention facilities, and to the women and children who are in government-run shelters, to assess their situations.
In addition to those who have landed in Thailand, an estimated 1,800 people have arrived in Malaysia since the start of the year. When notified, UNHCR intervenes to secure their release from detention and seeks access to assess their protection needs.
UNHCR recognizes the regional dimension of the irregular movements of refugees, asylum seekers and migrants by sea. Genuine cooperative regional approaches that promote sharing of burdens and responsibility could offer asylum seekers and refugees an alternative to dangerous and exploitative boat journeys. UNHCR offers its expertise and good offices to play a constructive role in this process.
Repeated tragedies at sea also demonstrate the need for a coordinated regional response to distress and rescue at sea. We urge States to agree protocols for the safe and quick disembarkation of rescued passengers and the provision of urgent humanitarian assistance. Mechanisms must be in place to assess the needs of and solutions for different groups, including access to UNHCR for those in need of international protection.
To help move this process forward, UNHCR is facilitating discussions between interested governments and international organizations at a regional meeting on irregular movements by sea to be held in Jakarta in March.
Amid continuing news reports of boats being pushed back to sea by some countries, UNHCR also urges States in the region to keep their borders open to people in need of international protection, to uphold the principle of non-refoulement and to offer them temporary assistance and protection until durable solutions can be found.
In parallel, UNHCR has been advocating with the Myanmar government to urgently address the root causes of the outflow. The Rohingya are not recognized as citizens of Myanmar and face many restrictions in their daily lives in Rakhine state. To resolve the problem, we encourage the government to commit to promoting reconciliation and peaceful co-existence as well as economic development in Rakhine state, pursue practical measures to ensure basic rights so that the Rohingya can lead normal lives where they are, and eventually grant them access to citizenship.
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| Shwe Maung represents Buthidaung constituency in northern Arakan state. (Photo: DVB) |
Hanna Hindstrom
Democratic Voice of Burma
February 22, 2013
A member of parliament has fired back at claims that Rohingya Muslims do not exist in Burma, after a senior government minister allegedly accused the group of fabricating its history in a parliamentary discussion on Wednesday.
It follows media reports that the Deputy Immigration Minister, Kyaw Kyaw Win, on Wednesday formally denied the existence of a Rohingya race in Burma, referring to a stateless Muslim minority isolated near the Bangladeshi border.
But Shwe Maung, who is a native Rohingya, slammed the allegations, quoted in the English-language version of Burma’s state media outlet the New Light of Myanmar, as historically and factually inaccurate.
“We should not simply deny there are no Rohingya, if we do that it would be irresponsible, we need a study,” said the MP, who represents Buthidaung constituency in northern Arakan state.
Shwe Maung is one of only two Rohingya MPs in parliament, both of whom represent the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) in Maungdaw district. In recent months, he has played an increasingly vocal role in defending the stateless minority, which is broadly viewed as “illegal Bengali immigrants” and denied citizenship by the government.
It follows two bouts of vicious sectarian clashes between Arakanese Buddhists and Muslim Rohingya in western Burma last year, which prompted senior politicians – many from the military and USDP – to call for the group to be exiled to a third country.
But Shwe Maung told DVB that he is leading a parliamentary initiative, along with two other MPs from Maungdaw district, to promote the rights of Rohingyas. He explained that they have called on the speaker of the lower house of parliament, Shwe Mann, to set up an investigative commission to establish whether or not Rohingyas exist in Burma.
“We [also] shared a separate report with our colleagues and MPs and I’ve received a lot of positive and constructive remarks,” he said. “We focused on the facts and documents, especially printed by government media and the ministry of information. Based on that most of the MPs are impressed and agree that there are Rohingya [in Burma].”
Shwe Maung cited historical research carried out prior to the British colonisation of Burma in 1824, which formally recognised some 30,000 “Rohingya” Muslims living in Arakan state. Both Burma’s first president and prime minister, Sao Shwe Thaik and U Nu respectively, reportedly recognised the Rohingya as one of the country’s “indigenous races”.
They were later stripped of their citizenship by former military dictator Ne Win.
“During my recent visit to Sittwe I have seen a lot of families with birth certificates with the ethnic name Rohingya, but still [some are] denying [them],” he said, dismissing allegations that “Bengalis” are migrating into Arakan state.
“People are not coming in, people are going out,” he said. “In [our language] Burmese Rakhine Muslims are called Rohingya – they are the Muslim people who live in Arakan.”
He also accused the English-version of the New Light of misrepresenting Wednesday’s parliamentary discussion.
“[Kyaw Kyaw Win] did not mention there is no Rohingya in Myanmar, but it appeared in the [English-language] media,” Shwe Muang.
In fact, the Burmese version of the New Light, quoted Kyaw Kyaw Win as saying “there have been cross-border relations since the ancient times”, although he added that Arakanese Muslims were not recognised as natives in the 1973 census. But many government representatives, including the President’s Office Director Zaw Htay, seized the opportunity to slate the Rohingya on social media.
Although Shwe Maung’s increasingly vocal activism represents a significant shift in the USDP’s notorious reputation for silencing dissent, some analysts question its implications for Burma’s political transition.
“I think it says more about the USDP, which is a party that people joined because it gave them a position of influence rather than a party with a particular ideology,” Mark Farmaner from Burma Campaign UK told DVB.
“I don’t think it says much about parliament, which is constitutionally almost powerless. I think it can give people a voice they didn’t have before; and some MPs are using that to represent their constituents whereas others are using it to promote their own self-interests.”
Farmaner added that it was “unfortunate” that Aung San Suu Kyi’s party – the National League for Democracy (NLD) – has still failed to come out more strongly on the Rohingya issue.
But Shwe Maung insists that he will continue to “carry the voices of his constituents” to parliament. He added that he is not necessarily pushing for Rohingyas to be recognised as “indigenous peoples” in Burma, but that their basic human rights must be respected.
“For the time being the most important thing is the people. People are living with a lack of food, they cannot move, they cannot access the market, they cannot access aid from the international community.”
More than 125,000 people, mostly from the Rohingya minority, were uprooted in last year’s violence and many are still denied humanitarian aid.
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| The survivors blamed Thailand's navy by forcibly removing the boat's engine and letting them to float for 21 days without food, creating a predicament that killed 97. (Photo: AP) |
Eliane Coates
Relief Web
February 22, 2013
Synopsis
The exodus of many Rohingya over the past year has brought increased international awareness to their plight, as well as Southeast Asia’s inability to deal effectively with forced migration. A regional approach is needed to find a durable solution to the influx of Rohingya boat people.
Commentary
SINCE THE communal clashes began in Arakan State in June 2012, the scale of Rohingya fleeing by boat to neighbouring Southeast Asian countries has increased significantly. According to a reliable source from the human rights organisation The Arakan Project, it is estimated 19,500 registered and unregistered Rohingya, including some Bangladeshis, have fled by boat from Bangladesh and North Arakan State, with an estimated 100 people having drowned during the process.
With an estimated 115,000 people in Arakan displaced by the communal clashes, it is not surprising thousands more Rohingya have fled from other parts of Arakan State not only by boat, but by air and overland too.
The boat people problem
Myanmar, a country once under a severely repressive regime, is now considered a budding democracy. Yet the opening up of Myanmar has re-ignited deep-seated and long-repressed inter-ethnic friction that has the potential to consume Arakan State in continual civil unrest. With the government of Myanmar showing little, if any, interest in the plight of Rohingya and giving no sign of granting permanent residency to Rohingya in the near future, the exodus of Rohingya to surrounding countries is unlikely to relent in coming months with harassment, intimidation campaigns and arbitrary arrests of Rohingya continuing today.
Along with the 200,000-400,000 unregistered Rohingya in Bangladesh, many Rohingya have for years sought refuge in Malaysia which is viewed by Rohingya as a welcoming destination due to the existing Rohingya community. Malaysia is currently the only country where Rohingya receive a minimum of protection. Rohingya now make up the second largest refugee group in Malaysia.
Yet, because Kuala Lumpur is not a signatory to the 1951 United Nations Convention on Refugees, nor the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees, Rohingya are technically illegal immigrants. Hence they often remain urban refugees in cities, with the constant threat of arrest, detention and deportation. However, in recent times no Rohingya have been arrested or deported, especially since 2009 when Malaysia began allowing United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) access to Immigration Detention Centers to conduct refugee status determination processes.
Thailand’s unsustainable policy
In the last month Thailand seems to have become not solely a transit country to Malaysia, but a destination country as well with increasing arrivals of boats carrying Rohingya intercepted off the coast of Thailand. Thailand’s current policy towards arriving boats of Rohingya is to ‘help them on.’ Boats found near the Thai coast are not allowed to come ashore but are escorted back out to sea with food, water, and fuel provided on the condition that the boat continues its journey to Malaysia.
While official reports state that 6000 Rohingya have illegally entered Thailand by sea since October 2012, the reality is there has been many more Rohingya arriving on Thai shores in undetected boats.
Over the last three decades from 1975, Thailand has hosted almost three million refugees, initially from countries such as Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, though mostly from Myanmar. Thai policy towards people from Myanmar during this period has fluctuated, despite international pressure urging Thailand to adopt a flexible policy towards displaced peoples. More recently, Thailand has engaged in ‘soft deportation’ of Rohingya across the Myanmar-Thai border as Myanmar refuses to re-admit Rohingya.
Rohingya, after being either handed directly to brokers, enter a tangled human trafficking web where they often are forced to pay brokers exorbitant fees or engage in forced labor in Thailand so as to eventually be transported to the Malaysian border. Worse, there have even been allegations against senior military officers of involvement in the smuggling racket.
Recent Thai army raids on camps in Thailand’s southern border province of Songkhla unearthed an estimated 900 Rohingya waiting to be sent to work in Malaysia. This development prompted Thai Foreign Minister Surapong Tovichakchaikul to state that those found, as well as a small group of Rohingya rescued from unseaworthy boats, would be permitted to remain on Thai soil for six months.
Although not upgrading their status to refugees, the Rohingya will be given a daily allowance of 75 baht (US$2.50) while Thailand talks with the UN, international agencies and seeks third countries willing to accept them.
Rohingya boat people will continue to arrive on Thai shores in the future. The strategy of soft deportation currently being employed will likely become unsustainable as many of the newly arrived Rohingya boat people will be unable to pay the high fees to traffickers, with many having lost their property in the recent communal violence in Arakan State.
Need for concerted regional solutions
In sum, the Rohingya immigration issue can no longer be regarded as an internal affair of the Myanmar government. Although many Southeast Asian countries understandably wish to steer clear of the sensitive debate on the Rohingya, the regional dimensions of this exodus of people seem all too evident. It is hard to escape the conclusion that what is urgently required is a concerted regional strategy aimed at coaxing the Myanmar government to more effectively address the situation in Arakan State.
While addressing the root causes of the increasing outflows of Rohingya boat people is important, it may not be sufficient. Regional countries may have to seriously explore the option of allowing boats carrying Rohingya to land on their shores and assist in the processing of people, giving Rohingya the right to apply for asylum and go through a refugee status determination process for eventual resettlement.
While undeniably only a temporary solution, this move may still help deal with the unmistakable regional repercussions of such human outflows arising from communal violence in Arakan State.
Eliane Coates is a Research Analyst at the Centre of Excellence for National Security (CENS), a constituent unit of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University.
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