Scores of Rohingyas seek refuge in Thailand
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
DW, Rohingya_News, Ron_Corben, World_Media
Deutsche Welle
February 13, 2013
Activists say that up to 19,000 people - mostly Rohingya Muslims - have
set sail from Myanmar's western Rakhine state to Thailand to escape
violence and deteriorating living conditions.
There are around 800,000 Rohingyas living in Myanmar, also known as
Burma. The minority group lives predominantly in the western state of
Rakhine. They are not officially recognized by the Myanmar government as
an ethnic minority group, and for decades they have been subjected to
discrimination and violence by the Buddhist majority.
Viewed by the United Nations and the US as one of the world's most
persecuted minorities, many Rohingyas have fled to neighboring countries
such as Bangladesh, India and also to Thailand to escape persecution.
Despite the fact that Myanmar has embarked on a series of political and
economic reforms, human rights organizations and activists say the
situation for Myanmar's ethnic communities has not significantly
improved.
Many Rohingya Muslims are fleeing from the northern Maungdaw and
Buthidaung cities of Myanmar's Rakhine state, and also from Sittwe,
Rakhine's capital, which was the center of sectarian violence last year.
The clashes between ethnic Buddhists and Muslim Rohingyas in the state
lead to the destruction of homes, shops and places of worship and has
left almost 200 dead and nearly 120,000 people displaced.
Discriminatory treatment and abuse
Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, says Myanmar needs to address the Rohingya issue urgently.
"There is a need to put concerted pressure on the Burmese authorities to
get Rohingyas recognized as citizens. The government should start a
registration process to grant citizenship to these people and to end
discriminatory treatment and abuses against Rohingyas."
The UN says that conditions in the refugee camps in the Myebon town of
Rakhine are "particularly shocking," with sanitation there being "very,
very poor indeed."
Chris Lewa, director of the non-government organization The Arakan
Project, is in regular contact with Myanmar's Rohingyas. He says living
conditions in the camps are horrendous and that a number of people don't
receive the aid sent to them. "Aid deliveries have been hampered and at
times blocked to the Muslim camps."
In its latest assessment, the international medical humanitarian
organization Doctors Without Borders calls on the Myanmar government and
community leaders to ensure greater security for people in Rakhine in
the face of reports of “alarming numbers” of acutely malnourished and
ill children in the camps.
"Skin infections, worms, chronic coughing and diarrhea are the most
common ailments seen through more than 10,000 medical consultations in
the camps since October 2012," the report said.
Statelessness
The violence and difficult living conditions have also driven Rohingyas
to risk their lives at sea. Rights groups fear “several hundred” men,
women and children from the region may have been lost at sea already.
One estimate has put the death toll as high as 500.
Last year, the UNHCR estimated that around 13, 000 people - including
Rohingyas from western Myanmar and Bangladesh - fled on boats. And many
of the refugees are children. Thailand's English language daily, The
Bangkok Post, interviewed 14-year-old Mohammad Ayu from Rakhine state,
who is one of many under-aged children to set sail on their own, seeking
refuge in Thailand after losing family members to violence in Myanmar.
Ayu said children were paying between 5,000 and 60,000 kyats (4.25 euros
- 50.57 euros) to board boats. His, he said, had been adrift for weeks
before his group was stopped and transferred by uniformed officers and
then handed over to a broker.
Activists continue to report that human smugglers are also taking
advantage of the situation and earn large sums of money from fleeing
Rohingyas.
Regional solution
According to Thailand Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC),
almost 6,000 Rohingyas have arrived in Thailand since October last year.
The Thai Government is allowing Rohingyas to stay in the country for up
to six months. The Thai Foreign Ministry is also holding talks with
other states to enable those at the centers to move on.
Colonel Kriskorn Paleethunyawong, deputy commander of Thailand's
Songkhla Provincial Police, told The Bangkok Post that the Rohingya
migrants should be prosecuted as illegal immigrants like everyone else
who enters the country illegally.
Lewa of the Arakan Project has recently visited some of the refugee
camps in Thailand. He fears for the well-being of the people living
there. "They live in overcrowded immigration detention centers in
Thailand. We have seen in the past that people have actually died in
custody."
He says a long-term solution is needed to address the issue. "There
should be a regional solution as it affects various countries in the
region - including Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia - which cannot solve
the problem individually."
Panitan Wattanyagorn, a political scientist at Chulalongkorn University,
backs calls for a regional response: "The international community
should come up with better guidelines to separate the people who are
seeking work and the people who are really in danger."
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