The Royal Thai Army’s Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC) last week requested, at short notice, to meet with representatives of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and local NGOs to discuss how refugees from Burma currently living in various camps along the Thai-Burma border can be repatriated in the near future. It is notable, however, that while regional military commanders were present at these meetings, no representatives from the refugee camps themselves or from community-based organizations (CBOs) assisting them were invited. The obvious and disturbing implication is that a decision on the status of refugees inside Thailand is likely to be made in the very near future with minimal consultation with affected parties. Moreover, the timing is not just premature and ill-considered, it is bitterly ironic given that last Friday, 20 June, was #WorldRefugeeDay.
We call upon all parties to respect the UN 1951 Convention and 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, which represents international law as regards the rights of refugees, and is at the very least morally persuasive if not legally binding on the parties concerned. We also call upon all parties to include representatives of the refugee camps and of CBOs in any future meetings on the status of refugees or their potential repatriation. Furthermore, we urge all parties to ensure that repatriation of refugees only takes place when circumstances are appropriate, it is genuinely safe to return, all refugees’ rights are guaranteed by the Burma government, and that, most importantly, such repatriation is completely voluntary.
Such assurances as might be made are unlikely to mean much until all ethnic groups in Burma have their rights preserved under an amended Burma Constitution, until they are granted proper self-determination and an equitable share of Burma’s economic development, until all land mines are cleared and people’s security guaranteed, and until violence and human rights abuses are halted against Burma’s beleaguered ethnic communities. While the Burma Army continues to wage war against the Kachin people, other ethnic communities such as the Karen are unlikely to feel that it is safe enough to return, while the increased militarization and economic acquisition occurring in Karen State only serves to further disenfranchise refugees.
We also call upon the wider international community – including the UNHCR – to apply necessary pressure on relevant authorities to ensure that the rights of refugees are prioritized and protected. We urge the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to become more vocal, and to take necessary political and economic measures to encourage all parties to respect international law, for refugees are nothing if not a regional issue.
The risks of doing nothing are obvious, and Karen Women’s Organization’s (KWO) Letter of Appeal on #WorldRefugeeDay paints a painfully clear picture of what is at stake: “Refugees have positions and opinions regarding their return that need to be respected. Whenever the question is raised to the refugees, ‘when do you want to return?’ the refugees answer that they will return when the politics in Burma is stable and sustainable, their safety is guaranteed, and there is justice for all. The process of preparing and planning the return of refugees should only be done with the full, genuine and well-informed involvement of individual refugees and the wider refugee community. Our rights should be respected and our input valued. Refugees are human beings just like everyone else. We hope the Karen, and other ethnic groups in Burma, and IDPs, receive freedom to live, as ordinary citizens, in Burma, with dignity, equality and peace.”
Burma Army offensives in Paluang areas cause hundreds of villagers to flee while an attack on the Karen National Liberation Army occurs in Tanintharyi Region, kills one and Shan State Army-North lose its camp at Red Ruby Mountain in Mongsu, southern Shan State, after heavy attacks by the Burma Army
Religious Affairs Minister, Hsan Hsint, is fired for not performing his duties efficiently amid allegations of embezzlement and President Thein Sein appoints a new religious affairs advisory group, comprised of two officials with ties to his own family and a former religious affairs minister
Police authorities press charges against labour activist Su Su Nway for organising a massive protest over land grabs without permission in Pyin Oo Lwin, Mandalay Region
In Chin state, a Burma Army soldier attempts to rape a Chin woman going to cultivate land
Thai military junta issues an order to speed up registration of migrant workers to protect them from abuse by human traffickers while in Phra Nakhon, Thailand, the Anti-Human Trafficking Division arrests a Burmese man for human trafficking and forced child labour
We Will Not Back Down
By Zin Mar Aung
The Irrawaddy
These Aren’t Refugee Camps, They’re Concentration Camps, and People Are Dying in Them
By Jason Motlagh
Time
Three Years of Suffering for the Kachin people, How Much Longer?
By Burma Partnership
Members of ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights, ACT NOW Against Increasing Human Rights Violations in the Region!
By Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Thai Industry Commits to Support Bail Out
By Finnwatch
မဟာသႏၲိသုခ ေက်ာင္းေတာ္ႀကီးႏွင့္ ပတ္သက္၍ အစိုးရ၏ အဓမၼေျဖရွင္းမႈအေပၚ သေဘာထား ေၾကညာခ်က္ ထုတ္ျပန္ျခင္း
By Generation Wave
Thailand: Fears of Crackdown Trigger Exodus
By Human Rights Watch
Statement by the IMF Mission to Myanmar
By International Monetary Fund
Karen Women’s Organization Letter of Appeal on World Refugee Day
By Karen Women’s Organization
Women From Burma Delegation Speaks In British Parliament
By Women’s League of Burma
Trafficking in Persons Report 2014
By US Department of State
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