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On the Run
By YENI Thursday, August 6, 2009


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MAE USU, Thailand — "If there is peace again, we will go back to our village," says the 60-year-old Karen woman, Bi Mae, as she holds her 4-month-old grandson in her arms in a makeshift bamboo hut.

But she knows well that she may never see some members of her family again or return to her village in Karen State, which has experienced a brutal civil war for more than 60 years.

 
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Just two weeks ago, Bi Mae and four of her grandchildren crossed into Thailand with more than 500 other Karen refugees, as gun fire echoed in the hills and news spread that the junta’s army was rounding up villagers for forced labor.

Since the beginning of June, fierce clashes between a joint force of the junta’s army and the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA) engaged the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), forcing some 4,000 Karen villagers and internally displaced persons from Ler Per Her camp in Burma to flee to Tha Song Yang in Thailand’s Tak Province for safety. Many refugees are also secretly living with friends along the border, but the exact number is impossible to determine.

Refugees are living at six sites. The Irrawaddy interviewed refugees crowded into the grounds behind a Thai ecotourism site at Mae Usu cave, only a few kilometers inside the Burmese-Thai border.
 
"Right now 1,998 people are on the list here. Most of them are women and children,” says Chaklo, a member of the Karen Youth Organization (KYO), one of the community-based organizations helping refugees.

To help support the refugees, the Thai Burma Border Consortium (TBBC), an alliance of NGOs working for humanitarian relief, has distributed rice, beans, fish paste and salt, while the French NGO, Solidarit?s, provided water and sanitary facilities. The UNHCR has provided plastic sheets and tarpaulins for the shelter.

However, torrential rains have been falling for many days, making life even more difficult. At the camp’s makeshift clinic—supported by Dr. Cynthia Maung, and her Backpack Health Workers Team—many patients receive treatment for serious gastrointestinal problems like diarrhea and dysentery that are common ailments in the rainy season. Children in the camp are particularly at risk, according to the medics. Some children sleep in the bamboo huts while others play on the muddy ground of the green fields.

"They need to learn,” said Chaklo. “We also are ready to do that. But the Thai authorities don’t want us to set up a school here because the site is temporary."

Traditionally, the Thai policy is to start out with a short-term solution to aid new Karen refugees. While there is fighting on Burmese soil, the authorities grant the civilians permission to cross the border. But if there is no fighting, the refugees will be sent back to Burma. Presently, there have been no further reports of fighting after the withdrawal of KNLA troops from their military bases.

But there are ongoing reports of abuses by DKBA forces—forced recruitment, forced labor and money/food/livestock extortion—causing more people to flee and cross into Thailand. As a result, the refugees, for now, have been allowed to remain.

On July 9, Tassana Vichaithanapat, the director of the Foreign Affairs Division of the Operations Centre for Displaced Persons in the Ministry of Interior, visited one of the new sites, Nuh Bo.

During his visit, he met with refugee representatives, Thai district-level authorities and military officials and urged the authorities and international agencies to continue to provide humanitarian support while the Thai government tries to find a durable solution or until the displaced people are able to return to their homes, according to the TBBC.

Also, the Tha Song Yang district committee, which includes military, border police and UNHCR representatives, met on July 15 to consider possible solutions: an immediate return to Burma, relocation to Mae La refugee camp, or to open a new refugee camp at the site where the refugees are currently staying.

"Finally, they agreed that the refugees should stay where they are until the end of the rainy season.



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COMMENTS (7)
 
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Garrett Wrote:
11/08/2009
planB, Nyeinc, Okkar, et al,

I don't recall calling you a liar, but if the shoe fits...

I will continue saying what I believe to be the truth, and you can continue to ramble on with the SPDC party line.

Note to all readers: Use Google or Bing to learn more about Burma and the atrocities of the SPDC and the Burma army. You will be shocked, and you will wonder why the media has suppressed so much for so long. You might also wonder why the U.N. has not taken action.

plan B Wrote:
09/08/2009
Garret
Proof, please. I am tired of saying:
"call me a liar or call yourself one"
Associating me with the SPDC is as easy as associating you with the SPDC
http://www2.irrawaddy.com/article.php?art_id=16441
Please let's not waste our time and your reputation.
If you have any good will left please direct it at helping people at the border that you do best.

Garrett Wrote:
08/08/2009
How truly absurd, and hypocritical for planB to soil this thread with his pro-regime propaganda! His post represents a window into his dark agenda and darker heart.

This has to be a new low, but I am not surprised, he represents the SPDC agenda perfectly.

While the regime's army and proxy forces are busy enslaving and persecuting these innocent people, planB is here like the propaganda arsonist he is lighting another fire of cynical ridicule at the expense of the SPDC victims.

Meanwhile in a half-dozen other threads, planB will promote the SPDC as if none of this has been going on for decades.

Take a good long look at these photos folks, because these are the enemies of the SPDC regime which planB spends so much time defending, and many of these children, and children just like them starve to death every day, or die from diseases and parasites which could be cured with a handful of pills.
And it ain't the sanctions mister, its the greed, corruption, and revenge of the SPDC.

plan B Wrote:
07/08/2009
"Can I ask Plan B how he can support the SPDC"
Wrong. Quote me and proof me wrong
Typical example/assumption/false accusation of opinionated here.
"Supporting suffering people uniquely like a lot of less vocal Burmese and none Burmese are doing is not equal to supporting SPDC."
"when they are the cause of all this death, disease and misery?"
All?
Can you ever even admit to the fact that some are not SPDC fault let alone being partly the fault of unrelenting? Blanketed Sanctions by the west.
Than you will have to reckon with the one who requested the sanction.
"Or is he only interested in the money they are paying him?"
Same terrible assumption. Proof please.
I know irrwaddy will not print this:
This is akin to the same lies Turnell repeated.
You are not a Democrat.
You are just an expat in UK. Brain washed by BBC/DVB/CNN/VOA the exile government and its ilk.
Smear my intension better have proof.

British Democrat Wrote:
07/08/2009
Can I ask Plan B how he can support the SPDC, when they are the cause of all this death, disease and misery? Or is he only interested in the money they are paying him?

planB Wrote:
07/08/2009
Kudos to The Irrawaddy. Besides bringing forums for expressing sentiments against the SPDC day-in-day-out, here is the info on the true plight of the "truly pure in heart."

Calling all those junta haters and DASSK lovers anonymous, this is where you can really make yourself count besides taking advantage of expressing how much you hate the SPDC.

Time to walk your talk.

Garrett Wrote:
07/08/2009
Thank you, Irrawaddy, for posting this article.

On cable television, there are popular survival programs where experts spend a week in various locations which are a challenge to survival.

One of the most severe challenges is to spend a week in the jungle, and of course their challenge will end in one week.

For the Burmese refugees, the experience is far more challenging, and many won't survive.
Along with finding food and shelter, they must face repatriation into the hands of their oppressors.

Now, during the monsoon season there is no shortage of water, but it is often too muddy to drink, and poses the danger of disease, floods and drownings.
Refugees may be protected from the pursuing regime forces by raging streams, or trapped by the torrents and unable to flee.
Survival in the jungle is not easy under the best conditions, and refugees will face malaria, dengue fever, dysentery, and other tropical diseases.

Sadly, hundreds of thousands are still hiding in Burmese jungles.

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