Myanmar refugee numbers swell in Thailand
MAE SOT, Thailand — As the 50,000th Myanmar refugee to be resettled abroad recently left Thailand for the United States, thousands of others fled their military-ruled homeland to seek shelter under tarps and in temples along the Thai-Myanmar border.
“We would be happier if we were back home as this is not our land, but we will stay here because that side is not safe,” said a 30-year-old medic treating a child for malaria, pointing across an open field to Myanmar.
Escalated violence in rural Myanmar means despite the world’s largest resettlement program, Thailand’s refugee population — numbering more than 100,000 — is not likely to diminish any time soon. More than 4,000 ethnic minority Karen have crossed the border in the past month.
The exodus was sparked by fighting between the Karen National Union and the Myanmar regime, a brutal conflict that has been going on for 60 years as the Karen seek greater autonomy.
In addition to the refugees in Thailand, the aid group Thai Burma Border Consortium estimates fighting has spawned nearly 500,000 internally displaced people in eastern Myanmar and countless atrocities against civilians.
Critics say Myanmar’s army seeks to eliminate opposition from the Karen and other ethnic minorities to seize control of the area’s natural resources, a valuable source of income for the impoverished country.
And with elections scheduled for July 2010, securing Karen State would help the ruling generals claim the entire country was behind the vote and their so-called “road map to democracy.” Critics have said the moves are a sham designed to perpetuate military rule.
“The main thing is the election — the government wants the Karen out of the picture,” said Ba Win, a teacher who worked as a government veterinarian in Karen State for five years.
The latest round of fighting erupted in early June as government troops and the allied Democratic Karen Buddhist Army, or DKBA, moved against Karen military positions and a large civilian camp, sending villagers across the border north of Mae Sot, a Thai border town 240 miles (380 kilometers) northwest of the Thai capital, Bangkok.
The Karen Human Rights Group says the government is also forcing Karen villagers to join the DKBA and turn the group into a border guard force to better control natural resources in Karen State.
Meanwhile, the thin tarps provided the refugees are not keeping the heavy monsoon rains at bay, but they fear if the rain stops, fighting will break out again.
No mosquito nets are available to stop the spread of malaria, and the refugees depend on Mae Sot-based relief organizations and a nearby Thai Karen village for food and supplies.
They won’t return home unless land mines in areas surrounding their villages are cleared. “Fighting we can see and run away from, but land mines can be anywhere,” said the Karen medic, who like others declined to give a name because of the refugees’ precarious status.
A number of the displaced, living in tent clusters according to the village of their origin, say they lost family members to mines during the flight to Thailand.
Other newly arrived Karen refugees have taken shelter in temples and schools along the border, but were wearing out their welcome as Buddhist Lent celebrations began this week, said Kathryn Halley of the aid group Partners, Relief and Development.
The new Karen refugees are to be moved into a single temporary camp, but aid groups and the Thai military have yet to agree on an exact secure location. Permanent camps in the area are too full to accommodate them.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees says it will resettle 6,000 of the 112,000 registered Myanmar refugees in Thailand this year. The United States, Canada, Australia and several Nordic countries participate in the resettlement program that began in 2004 and is now the world’s largest, according to the agency.
Mae Sot-based aid groups say repatriation has slowed because of the global financial crisis.
The newly arrived are unlikely to become candidates for resettlement abroad and were not even aware of plans to move them to a new location inside Thailand, a trip that will require climbing a muddy mountain pass and crossing a river.
One 50-year-old Karen woman said she had traveled back and forth across the Thai-Myanmar border three times in her life. “I just want to stay still now,” she said. “I am tired.”
Related News
Sri Lanka unlikely to revoke expulsion of UN officialSeptember 7th, 2009 COLOMBO - The Sri Lankan government is unlikely to revoke its decision to expel a UN official from Colombo after he made remarks about the conditions of war refugees, a senior government official said Monday. Unicef spokesman James Elder was ordered to leave and his visa was cancelled.
Flow of Myanmar refugees into China dropping as fighting between army, rebels subsidesAugust 31st, 2009 Flow of Myanmar refugees into China droppingNANSAN, China — The number of refugees crossing into China to escape fighting in Myanmar fell to a trickle Monday as government forces appeared to have defeated an ethnic militia. Hundreds of rebels from the largely ethnic Chinese Kokang region have already fled clashes in northeastern Myanmar, surrendering their weapons and uniforms to Chinese border police and crossing to safety after several days of skirmishes.
Myanmar refugees head home from China as battles end between government, rebelsAugust 31st, 2009 Myanmar refugees leave China as battles endNANSAN, China — Thousands of Myanmar refugees headed home from China on Monday as fighting between government troops and a rebel militia that left more than 30 people dead appeared to be over. More than 30,000 civilian refugees streamed into China to escape the fighting, which broke out last week after hundreds of Myanmar soldiers moved into Kokang, an ethnically Chinese region in northeastern Myanmar run by a local militia.
Myanmar refugees head home from China as battles ending between government, rebelsAugust 31st, 2009 Myanmar refugees leave China as battles endingNANSAN, China — Myanmar refugees began heading home from China on Monday as fighting between government troops and a rebel militia that left more than 30 people dead appeared to be over. More than 30,000 civilian refugees streamed into China to escape the fighting, which broke out last week after hundreds of Myanmar soldiers moved into Kokang, an ethnically Chinese region in northeastern Myanmar run by a local militia.
Myanmar police arrest 6 drug trafficking suspects; state media revises amount of seized heroinAugust 27th, 2009 Myanmar police arrest 6 suspects after drug bustYANGON, Myanmar — Police in Myanmar arrested six people after a recent drug bust that officials said Thursday was considerably smaller than initial reports in state media. An anti-drug squad seized nearly 3 million methamphetamine tablets and 104 blocks of heroin totaling 80 pounds (36 kilograms) during a raid of two homes in a northeastern border town with Thailand on Monday, according to the Myanma Ahlin newspaper and an official in the Home Ministry's narcotics division.
Myanmar reports major heroin and methamphetamine seizure near border with ThailandAugust 26th, 2009 Myanmar reports major drug bust near Thai borderYANGON, Myanmar — Police in Myanmar seized more than 100 blocks of heroin and nearly 3 million methamphetamine tablets near the border with Thailand in one of the military-ruled country's largest drug seizures, a state-run newspaper said Wednesday. An anti-drug squad confiscated two guns and ammunition and arrested four people in the raid Monday on two houses in the northeastern town of Tachileik, the Myanma Ahlin newspaper said.
House approves resolution extending sanctions against MyanmarJuly 22nd, 2009 House approves sanctions against MyanmarWASHINGTON — The House has voted to renew sanctions meant to penalize the junta that runs the Southeast Asian country of Myanmar, also called Burma. The resolution approving the reauthorization of the sanctions now goes to the Senate for consideration.
Myanmar military offensive forces thousands to flee into ThailandJune 17th, 2009 MAE SOT - Thousands of ethnic Karen villagers have been forced to flee across the border into Thailand over the past few weeks as the Myanmar army steps up its assault on the Karen rebels. Myanmar's army and a pro-government militia called the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA) attacked the border region near Thailand in a final push to destroy the Karen National Union (KNU), which has been fighting for independence for the last 60 years.
Myanmar's ethnic groups demand UN probe into Karen exodusJune 10th, 2009 BANGKOK - A coalition of Myanmar's ethnic groups Wednesday called on the United Nations Security Council to investigate attacks on ethnic Karen villages in eastern Myanmar that have forced more than 3,000 refugees into Thailand. Since June 6, some 3,295 Karen refugees have fled from Ler Per Her camp in eastern Myanmar to Thailand, escaping attacks on the camp by the Myanmar military and their allies the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA), according to border sources.
Aid groups: 3,000 villagers flee to Thailand as Myanmar troops shell area near their campJune 7th, 2009 Aid groups: 3,000 villagers flee Myanmar shellingBANGKOK, Thailand — More than 3,000 ethnic Karen villagers have fled into Thailand as Myanmar troops shelled near a camp where they were sheltering, one of the largest movements of refugees across the border in a decade, aid groups said Sunday. The Thailand-based Free Burma Rangers said that refugees began streaming out of the Ler Per Her camp in eastern Karen state on Friday and that Myanmar forces started launching mortar attacks Saturday morning during fighting with Karen guerrillas.
Aid group: 3,000 villagers flee to Thailand as Myanmar troops shell area near their campJune 7th, 2009 Aid group: 3,000 villagers flee Myanmar shellingBANGKOK, Thailand — More than 3,000 villagers have fled into Thailand as Myanmar troops shelled areas near their camp while fighting ethnic Karen guerrillas, one of the largest movements of refugees across the border in a decade, aid groups said Sunday. The Thailand-based Free Burma Rangers said that refugees began streaming out of the Ler Per Her camp in eastern Karen state on Friday and that Myanmar forces started launching mortar attacks Saturday morning.
Myanmar refugee children in Malaysia publish a book to raise money for cyclone victimsApril 28th, 2009 Refugees kids in Malaysia help Burma storm victimsKUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — When the teacher asked her class how it can help Cyclone Nargis victims in Myanmar, Steven Bawmying suggested laying a long underground pipe to send drinking water from Malaysia. The plan didn't fly, but Steven and other children in the school for Myanmar refugees came up with a better idea: They wrote short pieces about their lives — mostly sad tales of survival — published them in a colorful children's book and earned 25,000 ringgit ($7,000) from its sale.
Myanmar refugee children in Malaysia publish a book to raise money for cyclone victimsApril 28th, 2009 Refugee kids in Malaysia help Burma storm victimsKUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — When the teacher asked her class how it can help Cyclone Nargis victims in Myanmar, Steven Bawmying suggested laying a long underground pipe to send drinking water from Malaysia. The plan didn't fly, but Steven and other children in the school for Myanmar refugees came up with a better idea: They wrote short pieces about their lives — mostly sad tales of survival — published them in a colorful children's book and earned 25,000 ringgit ($7,000) from its sale.
US senators urge Malaysia to stop trafficking of Myanmar refugees on border with ThailandApril 24th, 2009 US urges Malaysia to end Myanmar human traffickingKUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — U.S. senators urged Malaysia to probe claims by refugees from Myanmar that Malaysian immigration officials handed them over to human traffickers on Malaysia's border with Thailand.
Malaysia vows action after US senators urge stop to trafficking of Myanmar refugeesApril 24th, 2009 Malaysia vows action on Myanmar human traffickingKUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysia's prime minister vowed to investigate a scathing report by U.S. lawmakers saying thousands of Myanmar refugees were handed over to human traffickers with some ending up working in Thai brothels.