Tuesday, 11 January 2011

Thailand again sullies its human rights record

7/01/2011 at 12:00 AM

Deja vu is a French term meaning "already seen". Refoulement is also French, meaning "to force back". Upon receiving a report on Christmas Day that Thai authorities had just forced back 166 refugees to Burma, I knew that I had seen this before - at Christmas 2009 in fact.
Indeed, only a year ago this weekend, a colleague and I had written an article in this newspaper decrying the Thai government's 2009 record on refugee protection. In late December 2009 - likewise seemingly calculated to coincide with the slowest week of the year - the army forcibly returned to Laos around 4,500 ethnic minority Hmong, among whom were 158 recognised refugees and many other asylum seekers.
A year later, only the facts had changed: the 166 refugees forcibly returned on Dec 25 had fled fighting in eastern Burma between the Burmese army and several ethnic minority armed groups. Of these refugees, 120 were women and children. They had taken refuge in Waw Lay village in Phop Phra district of Tak province, where authorities had likewise forced back at least 360 Burmese refugees on Dec 8, roughly 650 on Nov 17, and approximately 2,500 on Nov 10, 2010.

Along with the year-end symmetry, however, the human rights violations are the same. Everyone has the right to seek asylum, and those recognised as refugees have a right to not be sent back to fighting or persecution - the principle of non-refoulement.
The Thai government denied this right to the 166 people from Burma, all considered refugees by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The fact that Thailand has not ratified the UN Refugee Convention makes no difference: like the prohibition against torture, non-refoulement is customary international law, meaning that it applies to all states regardless of their treaty obligations. Once again, Thailand has committed a clear and direct violation of international refugee law.
Despite the ugly precedent set a year earlier, this action still came as a shock, given that on Oct 7 the Thai Foreign Ministry had publicly denied any "plans to repatriate to Burma displaced persons after the [Burmese] elections". It was election day itself, Nov 7, when the first of roughly 20,000 refugees from Burma began to arrive in Thailand. And on Dec 6 - though after several incidents of refoulement had already occurred - Tak Governor Samart Loifa was quoted in this newspaper as stating that Thailand would not send refugees back as long as the fighting continued. This, sadly, was often not the case, for while most refugees have returned to Burma, many - like the 166 on Christmas - did so involuntarily. And the fighting has continued throughout.
My colleague and I concluded in our article a year ago that "Thailand's disregard for its international legal obligations should not go without a response by the international community", and I can only restate that now. UNHCR, which issued a statement in late December calling on Thailand to not forcibly return the 166, should condemn the action and reiterate its call vis-a-vis all refugees who remain in Thailand or may yet arrive. Embassies in Bangkok should do likewise, while countries on the UN Human Rights Council (which includes Thailand as a member and Thailand's ambassador to Geneva as its president) should also raise concerns about this violation.
Indeed, it is now too late for the 166 Burmese refugees who have been forcibly returned, just as it was in 2009 for the 158 Lao Hmong refugees. But given ongoing conflict in Burma, refugees from there will continue to cross the border during 2011. Thailand, regardless of which party is in power, must acknowledge and uphold its international legal obligations. Once is already once too often for human rights deja vu.
Benjamin Zawacki is Amnesty International's researcher on Thailand and Burma.

Despite obstacles, refugees plan for education in makeshift camp

Thursday, 06 January 2011 22:09 Tin Soe - Kaladan Press

Kutupalong, Bangladesh: Some refugees from the Kutupalong makeshift camp are preparing to teach basic education to youth as private tutoring in huts made from branches and tattered black plastic sheeting, according to a refugee leader from the unregistered refugee camp.

“We are planning to set up more than 50 huts as private coaching centers as there are more than 10,000 youngsters without schooling in the camp,” said Ahmed, a young refugee teacher.

“Our huts are very small and the height is very low with plastic and bushes, so we will only teach thirty youngsters in a center at a time,” Ahmed said. “We have just organized some refugees who have completed classes seven and up in Burma and Bangladesh to be teachers.”

“The centers are not much like classrooms. The children sitting on the floor don't have books or a blackboard for their teacher to write on,” Ahmed added.

“We hope we will be able to manage the books for students and blackboards for the teaching huts with donations from our refugee community and other well-wishers,” said Syed Hussain, a 55-year-old community leader from Kutupalong camp.

"I like studying English, Bengali, and Math," said eight-year-old Formina. "When I am not at school I help my mother."

“I like studying English, Bengali, math, and Burmese,” said Rosina, a ten-year-old youngster from the camp, “but we need more books and pens for our studying.”

"We need textbooks and we need equipment," said Amina, one of the senior members of staff responsible for helping to train others to become teachers. "The lessons are for children aged 5–10. After that we can’t offer anything."

And yet the community struggles on, determined that its children receive some education, however basic. Within this huge unofficial camp, there are 30 classroom huts now. During the summer when the temperatures soar, the lessons will be held in the relative cool of the very early morning, according to Amina.

“We are very happy to be able to help our children with education from our own young refugee teachers, and pray for them to have success with their goals,” said Syed, an older refugee who has four children in the camp.

28,000 refugees are registered with the government under UNHCR, the UN's refugee agency. At least 200,000 more refugees – some claim the figure is as high as 500,000 – are unofficial. While the official refugees live in shelters, receive food, medical care, and educational support, the unregistered refugees are forced to fend for themselves.

The disparity between the official refugees and the hundreds of thousands of unregistered Rohingyas is no more starkly revealed than here at Kutupalong, south of Cox's Bazaar, where the official refugees live in permanent huts and the unofficial refugees in flimsy shacks. Such is its temporary nature that everyone refers to it as Kutupalong Makeshift Camp. And that is the way the officials see it; when residents tried to build a permanent school, the authorities tore it down.

On other hand, Children on the Edge, a British-based basic education program, is hoping to establish a nutrition and education program for these youngsters who have so little. "Their future at the moment is very bleak – they are struggling to get enough food to survive," said the charity's director, Rachel Bentley. "Healthcare and sanitation is very poor. Those that go out from the camp to earn money are in danger of being rounded up and sent back to Burma."

Mae Sot-Myawaddy border trade revives after eased Myanmar border measures

TAK, Jan 10

Cross-border trade between Thailand’s Mae Sot and Myanmar’s Myawaddy  has revived significantly following Myanmar's relaxation of border control measures, the top Mae Sot official said Monday.

District Chief Kittisak Tomornsak said trade at the second largest cross-border trading port along the Moei River in Mae Sot began returning to normal after the lifting of the freeze in effect since the neighbouring country shut the border crossing at the bridge across the Moei River and some 20 cross-border trading ports along the river last August.

Myanmar closed its border, the Thai official said, to improve its cross-border trade measures and to set up a border protection force.  The measures currently are nearly complete so the
Myanmar authorities have relaxed the border measures, helping revive trade along the border of the two countries.

Mr Kittisak said that if there are no further incidents or tensions, it is expected that Myanmar will reopen the Thailand-Myanmar Friendship Bridge in January.

Meanwhile, Pol Lt Col Rinnawat Puwattnatikan, commander of the 346th Border Patrol Police, urged local border patrol police to tighten security in order to maintain order and prevent the smuggling of illegal goods.

Children of Migrants in Thailand Get Caught Without a Country

04 January 2011, Daniel Schearf | Bangkok

In Thailand, children of migrant workers, most of them from Burma, can get caught in a legal limbo that leaves them stateless, unrecognized as citizens of any country.  There are thousands of stateless children with limited access to education and health care, and with limited freedom of movement. 

Thailand denies Burmese boy a passport

The problem of stateless children was highlighted when 12-year-old Mong Thongdee Thailand's national paper airplane champion, was invited last year to an international competition in Japan.

Although he was born in Thailand, the ethnic Shan boy was refused a passport because his parents are migrant workers who fled conflict in Burma.

Scenes of him crying on national television stole the hearts of ordinary Thai people.

Burmese man murdered in Phuket

Friday, January 7, 2011

PHUKET: Police are investigating the murder of a Burmese man found lying dead in shallow water off Kata Beach in Phuket yesterday.

Chalong Police were informed by local residents that a body was discovered in the water at the south end of Kata Beach at about 8am yesterday.

Arriving at the scene, they found the body of an Asian man below the water surface about five meters from a rocky outcrop.

A crowd gathered to watch rescue workers from the Phuket Ruamjai Kupai Foundation and Karon Municipality recover the body of the man, probably in his early twenties.

Initial examination found a single slash wound to the left side of the neck, but no other obvious signs of trauma.

Initial questioning of people in the area failed to determine the identity of the deceased.

At about 9:30am a woman,who happened to come by, said the body was that of a Burmese man known only as “Ya”, who worked with her at a nearby tom yum kung noodle shop.

Friday, 7 January 2011

Karen New Year Celebrated Across the World

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

They may live in countries on the other side of world, their families may have been torn apart, they may be living in refugee camps in Thailand, but when it comes to their New Year's Day, the ethnic Karen people join together as one in wishing each other a Happy New Year.
Thousands of Karen gathered on Wednesday in Insein Township in Rangoon to celebrate the start of the 2,750th year on the Karen calendar. 
Sources in Rangoon said an estimated 10,000 Karen people in Insein dressed in traditional dress to celebrate the event with traditional dances and ceremonies. They raised the Karen national flag at 6 a.m on Wednesday.  
Speakers at the ceremony called for the unity of the Karen people, said one attendee.
One of the major ethnic groups of Burma, the Karen have been indigenous to the land  for more than two millennia. Nevertheless, hundreds of thousands of Karen people still live in fear in their homeland, some hiding in the jungle while others are forced to flee to third countries. Decades of repression by the Burmese regime has resulted in more than 150,000 Karen living in refugee camps in Thailand. Some 60,000 Karen refugees have been resettled to Western countries.
Karen refugees in Thailand also celebrated their New Year on Jan. 5. Thousands of Karen in Mae La refugee camp gathered and held a festival, said a refugee at the camp. Mae La is the largest of nine refugee camps in Thailand with more than 40,000 Burmese refugees, most of whom are ethnic Karen.   
Several Karen people told The Irrawaddy that they were praying for peace in Karen State where armed conflict has been a way of life for villagers for more than six decades.
Naw Barso Ghay, a Karen girl in India, said, “I wish for all the people in Karen State to have peaceful lives. I wish for there to be no more war, no more homelessness and no more families torn apart.”
Saw Gregory, a Karen university student who is studying in Thailand, said, “I miss Karen New Year in Rangoon. I hope to see all Karen people unified and celebrating Karen New Year together in Burma, one day.”
Straddling the mountains that separate Thailand and Burma, the people of Karen State have been victims of human rights abuses by Burmese government forces since the country gained independence from Britain in 1948. The Rangoon government’s broken promise of ethnic autonomy and true federalism resulted in a civil war that has continued to this day.
Founded in 1947, the Karen National Union has led the fight for freedom and self-determination.
In a statement to commemorate the 2,750th Karen New Year, KNU Chairman Saw Tamla Baw said it is necessary for every Karen, wherever they live in the world, to uphold the Karen people’s cultural heritage and language, and hand it down to posterity. 
“I would like to urge all Karen nationals to work in a spirit of unity and in cooperation in this year of 2750 until the Karen people gain the right to live in freedom as a nationality, while resisting the enemy endangering our Karen people,” said Tamla Baw.
Zipporah Sein, the general secretary of the KNU, said, “I believe there will be a day when all Karen people gather freely together to celebrate our New Year under the Karen flag.
“Every single Karen person is responsible for this. We have to maintain the struggle for the liberation of the Karen people,” she said. 

TBBC to Cut Funds to Refugees in 2011

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

The Thailand Burma Border Consortium (TBBC) will cut humanitarian aid to Burmese refugees, as well as operational and programming expenses in 2011 due to a reduction in funding.
The TBBC is an umbrella organization of relief agencies that provides food and supplies to some 150,000 refugees from Burma living at nine refugee camps along the Thai-Burmese border.
The TBBC released a report on Tuesday saying that increased commodity prices, unfavorable currency fluctuations, a reduction in funding and feeding newcomers at the border have resulted in a shortfall in humanitarian aid for the year ahead. It said the cuts will affect food packages and materials for living shelters, as well as limiting any significant expansion in the agriculture and other livelihood sectors.
Many of the new refugees at the camps have fled the recent conflict between Burmese government forces and armed ethnic groups such as the Karen National Union. A majority of the refugees in Thailand have fled from areas in eastern Burma, especially Karen State.
An estimated 7,000 recent refugees are currently displaced in Thailand in numerous small groups at various locations along the border seeking to avoid the detection of the Thai authorities, said the TBBC report.
With some donors reducing funding, Sally Thompson, the deputy director of the TBBC, said that she is worried about long-term support for the Burmese refugees on the Thai border as there is no stability in the affected ethnic areas and refugees continue to flow into Thailand.
“We are concerned about long-term support even though we still have good donors,” she said. “In the long term, it will become harder to raise funds for Burmese refugees in Thailand.”
A housewife in Mae La Oon refugee camp said that she was unable to rebuild her house this year as she doesn’t receive sufficient bamboo, wood and leaf roofing, the standard construction materials at the camps.
In its report, the TBBC said it will also be looking at increased monitoring of food deliveries and distribution to ensure that food and non-food commodities are reaching the most vulnerable refugees.

Burmese migrant workers stage labour rights protest

Monday, 03 January 2011 22:39

(Mizzima)- More than 300 Burmese migrant workers protested against labour rights violations today in Bangkok.

Burmese employees of the SYK Autopart Import-Export Co. Ltd in Thakarm Road, Bangkhunthian, successfully pressed the company to meet six key demands.

The demands included the right to paid national holidays, the right to medical leave, and the right to obtain temporary passports and work permits, as well as for the installation of CCTV cameras in the workplace so hours of work could be properly recorded.

The workers protested in company uniforms.

“We wrote our demands in Thai and delivered them to management”, Ko Soe, a protest organiser told Mizzima.

The demonstration started this morning at 8 a.m. By 11 a.m. ten migrant worker delegates had reached an agreement with company representatives in the presence of local police.

Prior to today’s protest, workers had to give at least 30 days advance notice of resignation.

After today’s’ negotiation, they are now required to give only 15 days prior notice.

In addition, workers now have the right to complain about their salary and conditions, and the right to have a pre-employment ‘security deposit’ collected by the company of 1,000 Baht reimbursed upon leaving the company.

Ko Soe explained that “Some (employees) have worked for the company for more than three years. Despite knowing our labour rights were being violated, we didn’t dare to complain”.

"But since December 29, we have campaigned to secure our rights”, he stated.

Ko Soe added, “We have all got passports and visas. I encouraged workers by saying that the police must have a valid reason to arrest us”.

S.Y.K Autopart Import-Export Company Limited manufactures motorcycle helmets, spare parts, and accessories, including the popular Index Helmet range. It employs around 500 people including more than 300 Burmese migrant workers.

My Dream


Fleeing Myawaddy


Thursday, 6 January 2011

One year activities


ေရႊ႕ေျပာင္းအလုပ္သမားအခြင့္အေရးကြန္ယက္(M.W.R.N)၏ တစ္ႏွစ္တာကာလအတြင္း လုပ္ေဆာင္ခဲ့မႈမ်ား

ေကာ္မတီအဖြဲ႔၏လစဥ္အစည္းအေ၀း
ေကာ္မတီအဖြဲ႔၏လစဥ္အစည္းအေ၀းကို (၁၇)ႀကိမ္ ျပဳလုပ္ၿပီး အဖြဲ႔၏စည္းကမ္းခ်က္မ်ားရည္မွန္းခ်က္မ်ားႏွင့္အညီ ေဆာင္ရြက္ႏိုင္ခဲ့သည္။

ေရႊ႕ေျပာင္းအလုပ္သမားအခြင့္အေရးကြန္ယက္(M.W.R.N) သင္းလံုးကၽြတ္အစည္းအေ၀း
အဖြဲ႔၏ ပထမအႀကိမ္ သင္းလံုးကၽြတ္အစည္းေ၀းပြဲႀကီးကို ၃၀.၈.၂၀၀၉ ေန႔ရက္တြင္ ေဆးေပါင္းေက်ာင္းတြင္ ေအာင္ျမင္စြာက်င္းပႏိုင္ခဲ့ၿပီး အဖြဲ႔၀င္မ်ားႏွင့္ ေလ့လာသူဧည့္သည္ေတာ္မ်ား ၁၃၀ ေက်ာ္တက္ေရာက္ခဲ့ပါသည္။

ေကာ္မတီအဖြဲ႔၏ေရွ႕လုပ္ငန္းစဥ္ခ်မွတ္ေရးဆြဲျခင္း
၃၁.၅.၂၀၀၉-၁.၆.၂၀၀၉  ထိ (၂)ရက္တိုင္တိုင္ ေကာ္မတီ၀င္မ်ား တာ၀န္ခြဲေ၀မႈမ်ား၊ ေရွ႕ဆက္လုပ္ငန္းစဥ္ေရးဆြဲမႈမ်ားကို ျပဳလုပ္ခဲ့ၾကသည္။
၂၉-၃၀.၁၁.၂၀၀၉ တြင္ (၂)ရက္တိုင္တိုင္ ေကာ္မတီအဖြဲ႔၀င္မ်ားအသစ္ျပန္လည္ဖြဲ႔စည္းၿပီး ေရွ႕ဆက္လုပ္ငန္းစဥ္မ်ားခ်မွတ္ေရးဆြဲျခင္းမ်ားျပဳ လုပ္ခဲ့ပါသည္။

ဘာသာေရးပြဲေတာ္မ်ားပါ၀င္ပူးေပါင္းက်င္းပျခင္း
-၂၇.၉.၂၀၀၉ ေန႔တြင္ ေရႊ႕ေျပာင္းအလုပ္သမားမ်ားႏွင့္ပူးေပါင္း၍ စာသင္သားသံဃာေတာ္ပူေဇာ္ပြဲႀကီးကို ေဆးေပါင္းေက်ာင္း၌က်င္းပႏိုင္ခဲ့ ၿပီး အလုပ္သမားမ်ား ၂၀၀၀ေက်ာ္ တက္ေရာက္ပူေဇာ္ခဲ့ပါသည္။ အဖြဲ႔အေနျဖင့္ တက္ေရာက္လာေသာအလုပ္သမားမ်ားကို ပညာေပးစာ ေစာင္မ်ားျဖန္႔ေ၀ျခင္း၊ ယာယီပတ္စ္ပို႔ အေၾကာင္းရွင္းလင္းေဟာေျပာျခင္းမ်ားပါ ျပဳလုပ္ေပးခဲ့ပါသည္။
-၄.၁၀.၂၀၀၉ ေန႔တြင္ ေဆးေပါင္းေက်ာင္း၌ ဆီမီးတစ္ေထာင္ပူေဇာ္ပြဲကို ဦးေဆာင္က်င္းပခဲ့ၿပီး အဖြဲ႔၀င္ ၈၀ ခန္႔ႏွင့္ အလုပ္သမား၁၀၀ခန္႔ ပါ၀င္ပူေဇာ္ခဲ့ၾကပါသည္။
-၃၀.၁၂.၂၀၀၉ ေန႔တြင္ ေဆးေပါင္းေက်ာင္းရဟန္းခံရွင္ျပဳပြဲႏွင့္တရားစခန္းပြဲတြင္ ပူးေပါင္းပါ၀င္ေဆာင္ရြက္ခဲ့ပါသည္။
-၁၃.၄.၂၀၀၉ ေန႔တြင္ ၀ပ္ေခါင္မေဒယာေက်ာင္း ရဟန္းခံရွင္ျပဳႏွင့္တရားစခန္းပြဲကို ပူးေပါင္းပါ၀င္ေဆာင္ရြက္ခဲ့ပါသည္။

Rules and Regulations


ေရႊ႕ေျပာင္းအလုပ္သမားမ်ားအတြက္အခြင့္အေရးကြန္ယက္၏ စည္းကမ္းခ်က္၊ ဖြဲ႔စည္းပံုႏွင့္ တာ၀န္၀တၱရားမ်ား

အပိုင္း(၁)
အေထြေထြအခ်က္မ်ား
၁။ အဖြဲ႔အမည္။                 ။ ေရႊ႕ေျပာင္းအလုပ္သမားမ်ားအခြင့္အေရးကြန္ယက္
                                      အဂၤလိပ္ဘာသာျဖင့္အတိုေကာက္(M.W.R.N)

၂။ အဖြဲ႔၏အမွတ္တံဆိပ္။     ။
၂.၁။ အမွတ္တံဆိပ္၏အဓိပၸါယ္။        ။လက္ခုနစ္ဖက္သည္အဖြဲ႔၀င္ျဖစ္ေသာလုပ္ငန္းခုနစ္မ်ိဳးမွအလုပ္သမားမ်ားက ကိုယ္စားျပဳသည္။ု                     
                                                တက္သစ္စေနမင္းသည္ အလုပ္သမားမ်ားအတြက္ေန႔သစ္(ဘ၀သစ္)ကို ကိုယ္စားျပဳသည္။          
                                                ခ်ိန္ခြင္သည္ တရားမွ်တမႈ၊ တန္းတူညီမွ်မႈကို ကိုယ္စားျပဳသည္။
                                                ပင္လယ္သည္ ေရႊ႕ေျပာင္းအလုပ္သမားအခြင့္အေရးကြန္ယက္ကိုစတင္ ဦးစီးထူေထာင္ေသာ       ပင္လယ္ႏွင့္ေရထြက္ပစၥည္းအလုပ္သမားမ်ားကို ကိုယ္စားျပဳရည္ညႊန္းသည္။

၂.၂။ တည္ေနရာ။        ။93/200 ေစထကစ္လမ္း 1 အစု7 ထာ့စိုင္းနယ္ေျမ စမြတ္စာခြန္ၿမိဳ႕ စမြတ္စာခြန္ခရိုင္။

 
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