Caught in the crossfire
Burmese civilians are caught between a military dictatorship determined to drive them from their villages, and an unsympathetic Thai government more interested in trade than helping refugees.
By Hseng Khio Fah /Saw Sai Sai
26 July 2008
In 2007 as many as 76,000 villagers were forced to leave their homes as a
result of armed conflict and related human rights violations in Eastern Burma. Most of these people are still living in
makeshift shelters in the jungle. Others who fled to the safety of Thailand are
now being sent back to an uncertain future by the Thai authorities.
To enforce this new hard line policy on July 16, Thai military ordered Karen
villagers, mostly women and children who had fled fighting in Northern Burma to
leave the safety of a refugee camp in Mae
Hong Son
Province in Thailand.
The Karen Women’s Organization (KWO), based in Mae Sot, says these refugees are
at serious risk if they are forced back to Burma.

Photo: KNU (Toungoo district)
“We are seriously
concerned for the welfare and safety of these refugees. To repatriate women and
children in the middle of the rainy season is particularly cruel and we appeal
to the Thai authorities to reconsider their decision and allow them to stay,”
said KWO.
The refugees were from Toungoo and Nyaunglaybin district, north of Karen State,
Burma, and according to Human Rights Watch group, where the military offensive
continues with widespread and systematic violations of international human
rights and humanitarian law on a scale that amounted to crimes against
humanity.
Increased militarization and occupation by the Burma Army in ethnic states has
made it impossible for villagers to stay in their own land.
According to a 2007 survey by the Thailand Burmese Border Consortium (TBBC),
273 infantry and light infantry battalions are active in the country’s eastern
States-a third of the army.
Saw Hla Henry, secretary of Committee for Internally Displaced Karen Peoples
(CIDKP) confirms the Burmese army has increased their operations against
villagers.
“The soldiers burnt their homes. Many villagers had to take refuge in hideouts.
Others stayed on their farms, but were unable to work under the rule of the
military. Many villagers prevented from farming, had difficulty finding enough
food to feed their families.”
Saw Hla Henry says getting aid to the displaced villages is difficult.
“When IDPs areas are often patrolled by the military soldiers, they dare not
came out from the jungle. We can only provide them a relief of three months by
cashes and it is not enough for them to survive. They face diseases such as
malaria, malnutrition, diarrhea and other minor disease.”
Amnesty International’s 2008 Report.found that in spite of government
ceasefires with the armies of all but three ethnic groups, the destruction of
houses and crops, forced displacement, forced labor, portering and killings by
the military continued in all seven ethnic states.
Talking to CIDKP report, a Karen woman, Naw Wah, a mother of nine told of her
experience the night the Burmese soldiers attacked her village.
“I heard a big shell come over me. One of my sons pulled me down to safety. I
was very scared. To save our lives we ran. We tried to take rice and pots with
us, but it was difficult because of the darkness. Many people ran to different
places. Some villagers escaped across the border to a Thai refugee camp.”
Getting to safety in Thailand
has no guarantees. Recent arrivals have been sent back by Thai
authorities.
AI report classifies displaced people into three categories: these are IDPs in
mixed administration, ceasefire areas, relocation areas and hiding areas.
The TBBC reports that more than 3,000 villages had been destroyed relocated or
abandoned in the east between 1996 and 2006 and from 2006 to 2007, at least 167
more villages were displaced. Although the Burmese government denies these
figures, satellite photos provides evidence of burnt-out villages, an
increasing military presence, and growing populations of displaced people.
TBBC estimates 81,000 IDPs were living in Karenni State
as of October 2007. The majorities were in conditions of absolute poverty in
ceasefire areas administered by ethnic groups, but the most vulnerable were the
10,000 IDPs hiding from the SPDC and ceasefire party patrols in Shadaw, Pruso
and Pasawng townships.
The numbers of displaced people has been increasing in their thousands, as
fighting and militarization by the Burma Army continues to displace both
civilians and rebels groups. In the past many villagers have taken refugee in
neighboring Thailand
country of recent action by the Thai military are an indications those days are
now over.
The article was submitted to the Human Rights
Reporting Workshop, organized by InterNews, 21-26 July 2008 – Editor

