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'Women Are Raped, Children Abused, Men Thrown Overboard'

Wednesday, May 20, 2015
PHUKET: We, the undersigned, strongly urge the leaders of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, to protect migrants and refugees stranded on vessels in the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea, to facilitate safe disembarkation, and to give priority to saving lives, protecting rights, and respecting human dignity.

Grave events in the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea in recent days involving migrants and refugees - Rohingya and others - from Bangladesh and Myanmar (Burma) confirm that vulnerable people around the world are moving in search of safety and dignity, fleeing persecution, abject poverty, deprivation, discrimination, and abuse.

Such perilous journeys, whether by land, sea, or air, have become a global phenomenon.

In Southeast Asia, more than 88,000 people have made the dangerous voyage by sea since 2014, including 25,000 who arrived in the first quarter of this year alone.

Nearly 1000 are believed to have perished at sea due to the precarious conditions of the voyage, and an equal number because of mistreatment and privation at the hands of traffickers and abusive smugglers.

In the Bay of Bengal, migrants and refugees are fed only white rice and are subjected to violence, including sexual violence.

Women are raped. Children are separated from their families and abused. Men are beaten and thrown overboard.

We are deeply concerned at reports that boats full of vulnerable women, men and children are unable to land and are stranded at sea without access to urgently needed food, water, and medical assistance.

We urge States in the region to protect the lives of all aboard by allowing the passengers on these overcrowded boats to disembark safely.

We urgently call on leaders, with the support of Asean, to:

1. Make saving lives the top priority by inter alia significantly strengthening Search and Rescue (SAR) Operations.

2. Stop boat push-backs and measures to 'help on' boats to leave territorial waters, while ensuring that all measures taken are in strict accordance with the principle of non-refoulement and other fundamental human rights standards.

3. Provide for effective, predictable disembarkation to a place of safety with adequate and humane reception conditions.

4. Avoid the use of immigration detention and other punitive measures, and ensure that the human rights of all migrants and refugees are protected, and that all actions in regard to children are guided by the best interests of the child.

5. Set in place screening procedures staffed jointly by government and relevant international organisation personnel to identify the individual circumstances of all those arriving, including a) individuals in need of protection as refugees, asylum-seekers, or stateless persons, b) victims of trafficking or persons at risk of torture or other cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment if returned to their country of origin, c) migrants with health conditions in need of emergency medical care and first aid assistance, and d) migrants or others interested in voluntary return home.

6. Expand avenues for safe and legal migration, including for labour migration at all skills levels.

7. Expand efforts to prosecute traffickers and smugglers for their crimes in full accordance with international standards for human rights, while fully respecting the rights of victims.

8. Redouble efforts, nationally and through strengthened international cooperation, to address 'push factors' and the root causes of refugee and migrants flows, including discrimination, deprivation, persecution, and violations of human rights.

9. Put in place dedicated measures to combat xenophobia and discrimination against any group on the basis of race, sex, language, religion, ethnicity, nationality and national origin, or other status.

[signed by] Antonio Guterres, UN High Commissioner for Refugees; Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights; William L. Swing, Director-General of the International Organisation for Migration; and Peter Sutherland, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for International Migration and Development

Comments

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Sorry, I don't want to impress as being heartless, but what I miss here is that the 'Undersigned' not a single word say about the 'culprits' Bangladesh and Myanmar. At least a appeal to stop the Exodus at starting points would do good.

Posted by Kurt on May 20, 2015 09:57

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Hi Kurt

I thought it was a well drafted and comprehensive statement.

Bangladesh and Myanmar were not expressly named but your concerns were addressed in paragraphs 7, 8 and 9 in firm but diplomatic language.

Posted by Ian Yarwood on May 20, 2015 11:26

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Hi Ian Yarwood, thank you for your comment. Well, the last thing the boat people need is being addressed in paragraphs. They need to be stopped to take off. Remain in Bangladesh and Myanmar. 'Problems' with assistance of international community worked out internal in both countries. So far, beside 'paragraphs' nothing is really done in both countries where the roots of the problems are.. A job for UNHCR!

Posted by Kurt on May 20, 2015 13:14

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I have a better solution. Bring all burmese back to Burma and send Burma the bill. After not paying, sanction them, freeze funds and threaten with full scale war.

Posted by GeneralSomchai on May 20, 2015 15:56

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"I have a better solution. Bring all Burmese back to Burma and send Burma the bill. After not paying, sanction them, freeze funds and threaten with full scale war."

So you're okay with no more cheap Burmese labor on your ever-expanding, over-saturated housing "projects?"

I'll believe it when I see it mate.

Posted by farang888 on May 21, 2015 00:47

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Bangalis called themselves Rohingas in Myanmar
and they are muslims whereas majority of the people are Buddhist. Generally there is no discrimination against other religions in Myanmar

Posted by kyawzaw on May 22, 2015 14:05

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[quote]
Generally there is no discrimination against other religions in Myanmar
[/quote]

I politely but strongly disagree.

I worked in Yangon for 18 months as a teacher and headmaster at a private school. Most students were Buddhist (Burman majority ethnic group). A few of my young (7 years old) class were Muslim.

These kids were discriminated against by the young Burman kids who had been 'brainwashed' by their middle-class parents to hate Muslims.

The minority ethnic groups in my class (Shan, Kachin etc), did not exhibit this intolerance, and nor was there hatred towards Christian groups.

Each morning, I had to look after the Muslim childrens' lunch boxes so that their food could not be 'contaminated' by the Buddhist (Burman) children.

On my day off, I worked as a volunteer teacher in the very poor Dala Township area. I could only help out in the Buddhist monastery school - I was warned off by Burmans against helping in the poor Muslim school.

I was shocked at the almost total hatred of Muslims by the majority Burman ethnic group. A generation (or more) of Myanmar Buddhists had been brainwashed into illogical hatred of another religious group or ethnic majority.

Very sad, and my eyes were opened as to what some Myanmar people were really like.

Posted by Simon Luttrell on May 22, 2015 18:21

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Hi Simon

It is always good to read comments from someone with first hand experience.

The term "brainwash" seems very appropriate.

Nelson Mandela said that people are taught to hate.

Posted by Ian Yarwood on May 22, 2015 21:30

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Hi Simon

You mentioned that you had to protect the Muslim kids' lunch boxes from being contaminated by the Burman kids. Can you elaborate on that please? How might they be contaminated?

Thanks.

Posted by Ian Yarwood on May 23, 2015 11:26


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