| REFUGEES
For decades, wave after wave of Burmese refugees have fled war and
oppression in their native land to seek uncertain exile in neighboring
countries. The toll in human suffering is incalculable, and the
continual mass migrations have created serious regional disruptions and
tensions. As of early 1998, nearly 300,000 Burmese were refugees in
Thailand, Bangladesh, and India. Attacks by Burma’s military junta,
the State Peace and Development Council (until November 1997 the State
Law and Order Restoration Council or SLORC), continue to drive people
from their homes. Ever greater numbers of Burmese — as many as one
million — are “internal refugees,” chased from their homes by army
attacks and forced relocations aimed at either cutting local links to
armed opposition groups or seizing their lands for state-run farming or
logging.
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Burma’s
peoples are victim to some of the world’s worst and most consistent
human rights abuses. The United Nations, Amnesty International, Human
Rights Watch, and other groups have produced numerous reports detailing
a litany of gruesome violations. Political opponents of the army junta
are murdered, tortured, or jailed for years under harsh conditions.
Villagers are press-ganged as forced laborers or as porters in combat
zones. In rural areas, summary executions, rape, and robbery by soldiers
are routine and unpunished. Clearly, Burmese fleeing to exile fulfill
the international legal definition of a refugee as someone who has “a
well-founded fear of persecution” in their homeland.
After the bloody suppression of the 1988 pro-democracy movement,
thousands of students and political activists evaded army round-ups and
escaped to Thailand and India. Some returned to Burmese territory to
take up arms against the regime. Others made their way to third
countries and are still active in the democracy movement from exile. But
many more have been forced to remain in camps near the Burmese frontier,
often under very difficult conditions.
Ethnic minority peoples, comprising about 40% of Burma’s population,
are special targets for abuse. Their indigenous lands along Burma’s
frontiers have for decades been consumed by rebellions that have flared
and simmered in a quest for autonomy or independence. The army,
dominated by the majority Burman ethnic group, has exacerbated tensions
and fanned resistance through heavy-handed and often savage responses to
opposition activities. The army’s “Four Cuts” strategy is designed
to deny armed opposition groups access to food, money, information, and
recruits. It is often enforced through mass relocations and widespread
destruction of communities, accompanied by killings and other brutality.
Muslim people in southwestern Burma are special targets for
repression. There, repeated military campaigns have included desecration
and destruction of mosques and systematic rape. A major army campaign in
1991 drove a quarter million Rohingya people from their homes into
neighboring Bangladesh. Most have returned with promises of safety, but
over 20,000 today remain in camps in Bangladesh. They are joined every
day by new refugees, even as the UN and Bangladesh government press the
refugees to return home. Violent clashes broke out in two refugee camps
in 1997 and 1998 as refugees protested against forced repatriation to
Burma, where they warn they still face severe military persecution.
The Burmese junta uses religion as a weapon to divide people along
the Thai frontier as well, where there is a sizable Christian minority.
In 1995, the army encouraged a small group of Karen Buddhists to join
them in taking up arms against Christians of the same ethnic group who
are opposed to the Rangoon regime. The attacks have driven thousands of
people across the border to Thailand. Burmese government-supported
militia have continued to mount raids even across the international
boundary, destroying refugee camps and killing or kidnapping civilians.
These cross-border incursions have raised tensions with Thailand and the
potential for regional unrest.
Forced relocations and displacement of people within Burma is another
serious problem. Major army assaults in 1997 and early 1998 forced tens
of thousands of Karen, Mon, and Shan people to abandon their villages
and either flee to exile or move into army-controlled “strategic
hamlets.” The military junta, with no accountability to the population,
has also imposed massive relocations of people in ethnic Burman majority
urban and rural areas. Some people have been chased from their homes to
allow for logging operations or the creation of state farms. Entire
communities have been forced to move to new “satellite towns” that
often lack services or communications and are sometimes located on
disease-prone and infertile lands. Localized protests against such
actions have been reported, but Burma’s civilian population is
basically defenseless against the regime’s well-armed and fast-growing
army.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Burma Project, Open Society Institute
400 West 59th Street, 4th floor
New York, NY 10019 USA
tel: (212) 548-0632 fax: (212) 548-4655
e-mail: burma@sorosny.org;
http://www.soros.org/burma.html
Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration
Southeast Asia Program Officer, U.S. Department of State
Washington, DC 20520 USA
tel: (202) 663-1012 fax: (202) 663-1530
http://www.state.gov
Burma Border Consortium
12/15 Convent Road Silom
Bangkok 10500 Thailand
tel: (66-2) 238 2568 fax: (66-2) 266 5376
e-mail: bbcbkk@mozart.inet.co.th
International Rescue Committee
122 E 42nd Street, 12th floor
New York, NY 10168-1289 USA
tel: (212) 551-3000 fax: (212) 551-3180
http://www.intrescom.org
Jesuit Refugee Service/USA
1424 16th Street, NW, Suite 300
Washington, DC 20036-2286 USA
tel: (202) 462-0400 fax: (202) 328-9212
e-mail: obryonjrs@aol.com;
http://www.jesuit.org/refugee
Karen Refugee Committee
PO Box 5, Mae Sot, Tak Province
63110 Thailand
tel: (66) 55 523 947 fax: (66)55 546 869
Refugees International
2639 Connecticut Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20008 USA
tel: (202) 828-0100 fax: (202) 828-0819
e-mail: ri@refintl.org; http://www.refintl.org
UN High Commissioner for Refugees (Geneva)
Bureau for Asia and the Pacific
PO Box 2500; CH - 1211
Geneva #2 Depot, Switzerland
fax: (41-22) 739 7335
e-mail: hqao00@unhcr.ch;
http://www.unhcr.ch
U.S. Committee for Refugees
1717 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Suite 701
Washington, DC 20036 USA
tel: (202) 797-2105 fax: (202) 797-2363
http://www.irsa-uscr.org
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Burma:
Country in Crisis was prepared by Open
Society Institute's Burma project
Content:
Republished
with permission from Open
Society Institute
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