Bangkok Post
February 3, 2013
A long-time activist for the Rohingya stands behind a plea made
last week before parliament calling for the government to take a more
humanitarian stance towards the ethnic group who are easy prey for
trafficking gangs
STILL DRIFTING: Left and below left, Rohingya refugees pack a boat headed to Malaysia last week as the boat is boarded by Thai Navy officers offering assistance close to Phuket island. |
‘Why is this not human trafficking? If this is not human
trafficking, what else could it be?” asked an emotional Abdul Kalam,
coordinator of Thailand’s Rohingya National Organisation. He was
referring to the decision last Monday to repatriate Rohingya from
Myanmar’s Rakhine state. The National Security Council, along with the
Foreign Ministry, ruled that human trafficking plays no part in the
rickety boats full of Rohingya that have washed up on Thai shores
because there was no evidence of slave labour, forced prostitution or
forced begging. Therefore the Rohingya can stay a maximum of six months
in Thailand before they are sent back to Myanmar.
Abdul Kalam, a Rohingya who left Myanmar 30 years ago and entered
Thailand at Tak’s Mae Sot district, told Spectrum last week he estimates
that, besides the highly publicised boat people, some 3,000 to 4,000
Rohingya live as illegal immigrants in Thailand, mostly in Bangkok.
Mr Kalam is registered with the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), and thus has the right to stay here and earn a
living. But he has never forgotten his roots and has worked for several
years to help Rohingya who have fallen victim to traffickers. His group
is an offshoot of the Burmese (Myanmar) Rohingya Association in
Thailand, whose president, Maung Kyaw Nu, on Wednesday made a plea
before the parliament’s committee on law, judiciary and human rights for
the government to grant temporary asylum to Rohingya here and for the
international community to intervene on behalf of the minority in
Myanmar.
Maung Kyaw Nu told the committee that Rohingya migrants pay 60,000 baht to 65,000 baht each to smugglers to get into Thailand,
Mr Kalam told Spectrum: ”There are networks. We have reported the
authorities involved in trafficking several times over the years. But
the problem remains unsolved. More and more Rohingya become victims.”
On Jan 10, police rounded up more than 300 Rohingya at a remote
plantation in Songkhla’s Sadoa district. The incident, coming on the
heels of widespread mob violence directed at Rohingya in Rakhine state,
brought renewed attention to the long-standing problem from local and
international humanitarian organisations, including the UNHCR, as well
as foreign governments. This in turn increased pressure on the Thai
government to come up with solutions other than to criminalise the
group.
According to figures from the Department of Special Investigation,
1,225 Rohingya were arrested in 2007; 2,763 in 2008; and 4,886 in 2009.
Considered to be illegal migrants, they were deported bak to Myanmar.
”Rohingya have been locked up in camps and some have been
physically assaulted,” said Mr Kalam. ”They have been traded among
trafficking gangs and those looking for cheap labour.”
Most of the Rohingya who have arrived in Thailand are men between
the ages of 15 and 50 years old, and it’s believed they are headed for
work in Malaysia and in the Middle East.
Lately the situation has become complicated with the presence of more children and women, some of them pregnant.
Mr Kalam said that just about all Rohingya leave Myanmar willingly,
expecting a safer and better life. It is not until their journey is
halfway complete that they realise they are in the hands of traffickers
who are often ruthless.
There is an agreement among academics, international organisations
and even Thai security agencies that trafficking of Rohingya is a
reality and should not be tolerated. ”We’ve learned that each man can be
traded for as much as 30,000 to 40,000 baht. What else do we need to
prove that they are victims of human trafficking gangs?” asked Mr Kalam.
But despite many reports giving examples of trafficking only a few
people have been arrested for the crime. ”We do not know how the legal
process is going … I am afraid that they’ll be set free because there is
not enough evidence,” said Mr Kalam.
”However, I am certain that the rescued Rohingya should be able to
identify them [the traffickers] if the authorities really want to take
legal action against them.”
ADEQUATE SHELTERS NEEDED
At present, about 1.400 Rohingya reside in different centres in the
South, mostly in Muslim communities. However, most of these centres are
overcrowded. More than 50 women and children at an overcrowded welfare
centre in Phangnga province were sent to Surat Thani, while other
Rohingya in the South have been transferred to centres in Prachuap Khiri
Khan and Kanchanaburi province.
Military authorities have strongly disagreed with establishing
shelters or camps for the Rohingya, but securities agencies including
the National Security Council have proposed that the government build
three detentions centres in Songkhla and Ranong. However, individual
Rohingya would still be be subject to deportation after six months in
the country.
In Ranong, which has dealt with a large influx of illegal migrants
from Myanmar for several years, moves to build temporary shelters have
been met with protests.
On Wednesday, Foreign Minister Surapong Tovichakchaikul asked for
help from the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation to find solutions to
the problem and led about 15 diplomats from the group on a tour of a
temporary shelter for about 100 Rohingya women and children in
Songkhla’s Muang district.
”If possible, we would like to send them back to their place of origin or a third country,” Mr Surapong told the group.
Mr Kalam said that bigger shelters for Rohingya are urgently needed
with better living conditions. ”These are not criminals, they are
victims of trafficking gangs,” he said. He said it was important that
they be allowed to stay together, especially families, and cited cases
in which children had been separated from their parents to live in
different centres.
Mr Kalam, who had just returned from a visit to Phangnga province
where a group of 110 Rohingya were picked up from Mu Ko Surin Marine
National Park, said he has hopes the system will soon be better
coordinated. ”The sooner we set up an efficient system the better,
because it’s certain many more will be leaving their homes in Rakhine
state,” he said.
He is concerned about the six-month timeframe proposed by Thai
authorities, saying it is not enough time to sort out the Rohingya’s
problems and arrange for third countries to receive them.
”One thing is certain, they do not want to be deported back to
Myanmar. If they are deported, they will come back again,” he said.
He urged a case-by-case approach to determine each migrant’s status
and desired destination. However, he added that he had talked to many
Rohingya who really had no set destination, saying ”it is up to Allah”.
Nevertheless, many have relatives in Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia or
other countries they would like to
He said a proper resettlement process in Thailand would take at
least a year, and that to lessen the burden on the government and the
public, international organisations, especially the UNHCR, should be
given full access to the Rohingya in temporary shelters and work with
third countries to arrange for their resettlement.
When asked if providing temporary shelters in Thailand would
encourage more Rohingya to make the journey from Rakhine state, Mr Kalam
said this is doubtful and that the driving force for the exodus is ”the
genocide that has been going on” in Rakhine state. ”No one wants to
live in shelters anywhere,” he said, adding that some of those rescued
here had come from refugee camps in Bangladesh.
Mr Kalam said he is concerned that if Rohingya in Thailand are left
without proper care and guidance it could lead to a security problem
for the Thai government. ”If they are left unattended without any
future, they will be at risk of being lured into doing bad things,” he
said. He said that with help from Thai authorities and local communities
_ both Muslim and Buddhist _ there is hope for the future of Rohingya
refugees and also those who remain in Myanmar.
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