Wednesday, March 31, 2010

UNHCR cash makes it easier for refugees to help themselves in Malaysia

UNHCR News

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, March 26 (UNHCR) – It is early on a Sunday morning and Timothy, a refugee from Myanmar, is making his rounds of shophouses in the heart of Kuala Lumpur. Some 150 refugees live here, all ethnic Chin from Myanma and renting 25 rooms under the Senthang Housing Project which Timothy coordinates.
The mood is serene, the individual flats small but clean – a marked contrast to the dirty, noisy, cramped places many refugees in Malaysia are forced to rent because they have so little money.
Just ask Li Li, who used to live with her husband, and two boys, aged seven and 10, in a small three-bedroom flat with about 45 other people. "I could not get a lot of rest," she recalls. "Sometimes we had to sleep like this – with a person's head at a person's feet. When someone woke up to go to the bathroom, I also woke up."
That's why Li Li is so grateful for her new accommodations. "Senthang is better for my family," she says. "I like it because it is very quiet here and very peaceful. No one is allowed to drink alcohol and make trouble. There are no bad men here, all Myanmar people and we know who they are. So I feel very safe for my children. I feel very peaceful."
Timothy, a member of the Senthang Refugee Center whose brainchild the project was, is careful to cultivate the sanctuary feeling – the entrance is locked and visitors are limited at night.
The Senthang Housing Project opened in November, 2009 with funds from the UN refugee agency's new small grants project, the Social Protection Fund, which provides up to US$3,500.00 for individual small-scale self-help projects developed and implemented by refugee groups. Since its launch in August 2009, the Fund has approved grants for 42 proposals from refugee groups.
"We wanted to provide our people a safe place to live, where they would not be exploited by the landlord," says Timothy. "In many circumstances, refugees are forced to pay several months' rent up front, which they cannot afford. With the funding we received from UNHCR, we were able to pay the deposit for 25 rooms which the refugees then rent directly from us on a monthly basis."
There are some 82,400 registered refugees and asylum-seekers in Malaysia, mostly from Myanmar, living in cities and towns. While they receive assistance and support from UNHCR and non-governmental organizations (NGOs), many refugees have to find their own ways of surviving in cities. This is why UNHCR set up the Social Protection Fund to support the refugee communities' own solutions.
"Within the refugee communities, there is a wealth of knowledge and skills for project implementation," says Letchimi Doraisamy, the UNHCR officer in charge of the Social Protection Fund. "They best know the needs of their communities for their day-to-day survival."
"Most importantly, they have already been running initiatives that support the needs of their communities even without UNHCR's financial support. By providing grants to refugee groups, UNHCR ensures projects can be implemented and sustained effectively."
The Segambut Myanmar Refugee Community applied for the grant to add on a much-needed service in their existing refugee hostel project – a grocery store for the 250 refugees living in the area.
"We realized that it was difficult for our refugee community to travel to the market due to security fears," says project coordinator Dun, a refugee from Myanmar. "Some have been robbed while carrying money for groceries. A grocery store at this centre would mean refugees can easily obtain daily food items and not worry about security."
So Shining Valley Grocery Store was set up in the living room of the refugee hostel. Dun buys sundry items wholesale and can sell them at lower prices than the neighbourhood shops. Dun says the benefits of the UNHCR funding are more than just a convenient grocery store.
"Half the profit is used to pay for the salary of the shopkeepers while the remaining amount goes back to our community project. We use the money to help with medical emergencies such as delivery of babies, hospitalization costs and other emergency costs," Dun says.
Back at the apartment building, Timothy agrees the pay-offs have been far-reaching and unexpected.
"The profit from the project is now being used for a school for the Chin children living in the neighbourhood, so this is good for our children," he says. "But I think there are more benefits. The tenants of each floor act like a 'village' that shares the cooking and cleaning, and they take care of each other. This becomes a home for them."

By Yante Ismail in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia



16 migrants escape from centre

STRAITS TIMES

KUALA LUMPUR - SIXTEEN migrants were on the run on Monday after cutting their way out of a detention centre at Malaysia's main international airport, immigration officials said.

The group, 12 Afghan and four Myanmar nationals, got through the gate of a facility at Kuala Lumpur airport where officials said they were being held for their own protection.
'The 16 are believed to have cut through the wire mesh of the gate and escaped the centre where they were being protected from human trafficking syndicates,' Selangor state immigration chief Johari Yusof said.

'The Afghans were part of a group of 18 we had rescued in October last year from a ship adrift off our coast as these malnourished victims who were on the verge of death from starvation were being smuggled to a third country,' he added. Mr Johari said police were looking for the group.

Immigration activists say Malaysia is often used as a staging post for trafficking gangs moving people from Afghanistan and Myanmar to Indonesia and Australia. Earlier this month, maritime authorities picked up 93 members of Myanmar's Rohingya Muslim minority who had drifted aboard a boat for 30 days after fleeing their country.

Malaysian police last July arrested five immigration officials for involvement in an international syndicate that smuggled Rohingya refugees into the country. With one of Asia's largest populations of foreign labour, Malaysia relies on its 2.2 million migrants to clean homes, care for children and work in plantations and factories. -- AFP



Friday, March 26, 2010

Migrant workers 'raped, abused, unpaid' in Malaysia

asiaone NEWS

KUALA LUMPUR - Amnesty International on Wednesday urged Malaysia to end appalling treatment of migrant workers, saying many were raped, abused and unpaid and endured conditions "close to bonded labour".
In a damning report, the human rights group accused the Malaysian government of "facilitating" human trafficking after it found cases of immigration officials delivering Myanmar detainees to gangs on the Thai border.
Malaysia is one of Asia's largest importers of labour, with a workforce of 2.2 million, but Amnesty said they were too often "lured" to Malaysia and "used in forced labour or exploited in other ways".
"Migrants, many from Bangladesh, Indonesia and Nepal, are forced to work in hazardous situations, often against their will, and toil for 12 hours a day or more," the group said in a statement.
"Many are subject to verbal, physical and sexual abuse," it added.
Amnesty said most workers borrowed substantial sums to pay recruitment agents to secure a job - only to discover too late that they had been given empty promises and could not afford to return home.
"Some are in situations close to bonded labour," it said, adding that laws allowing employers to hold workers' passports prevented them from leaving abusive workplaces for fear of arrest.
"Coercive practices such as these are indicators of forced labour," it said.
Amnesty said its findings were based on interviews with more than 200 migrant workers, many of whom told horrifying stories of being abused, beaten, threatened with death, or at the least unpaid for long stretches.
A 26-year-old domestic helper from Indonesia said she was raped twice and attacked with a hot iron by her employer after being accused of not picking up the phone quickly enough.
"I didn't know why he told me to turn on the iron. He shouted, "Is that iron hot?" And then tried to iron me. Push the iron toward my body," the unidentified worker was quoted as saying.
Another worker, Mawar, who was only 15 when she came to Malaysia, said her recruitment agent burned her nipple with a cigarette, and forced her to clean the floor with her tongue "just like a dog".
"Another time the agent forced me to eat five cockroaches while they were still alive. She also forced me to drink urine from other workers," said Mawar, whose nationality was not given.
Amnesty also documented over a dozen cases in which Malaysian immigration officials allegedly handed over Myanmar detainees to traffickers operating on Malaysia's northern border with Thailand between 2006 and 2009.
"The Malaysian government has the responsibility to prevent such abuses, but instead facilitates trafficking through its loose regulation of recruitment agents and through laws and policies that fail to protect workers," it said.
An official from the home ministry, which oversees the immigration department, said it would not respond to the allegations until it had an opportunity to study the report.
Amnesty said that workers often face indiscriminate raids from authorities and demands for bribes from police, and that those who cannot pay end up in detention centres in deplorable conditions.
The government said last year it was mulling new laws to enshrine conditions for foreign workers, after persistent complaints that they lack protection.
"Until Malaysia's labour laws offer effective protection and are effectively enforced, exploitation will continue," said Michael Bochenek, Amnesty's policy director who authored the report.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Malaysia to conduct surprise raids to weed out illegal immigrants

M & G news

Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia plans to soon begin conducting surprise raids on shops and businesses to check on the welfare of foreign workers as well as weed out undocumented immigrants, a news report said Thursday.
The raids are to be conducted in the coming weeks by several agencies, including the Home Affairs Ministry, Labour Department, Immigration Department and police, Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein told the Star newspaper.
'This is to ensure that employers comply with labour requirements and to check human-trafficking activities,' he was quoted as saying.
The government had earlier announced a nationwide crackdown on undocumented foreign workers scheduled for February 15, but the operation was deferred. Hishamuddin said a new date had yet to be set.
A total of 2.4 million foreign workers were recorded in Malaysia at the end of 2009 while the government estimated there are hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants.
Malaysia, which relies heavily on foreign labour for its agriculture and construction industries, has long struggled to contain the problem of illegal immigration.
In a bid to curb the rise in undocumented migrants, the country's laws prescribe whipping for offenders as well as locals found guilty of hiring illegal workers.


Saturday, March 13, 2010

Chin refugees arrested in Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur

Highly controversial RELA corps known as People Volunteer Corp spearheaded by immigration department raided Taman Bukit, Cheras on March 11, 2010 at midnight and rounded up almost 300 Chin refugees. All of them were herded down to Federal Immigration Headquarters, Putra Jaya where the authorities screened the validity of recognization as refugee under UNHCR Mandate. Most of them who are already registered with UNHCR were released except couple dozens of Chin asylum seekers who are temporarily holding CRC and other community registration papers as they are waiting to get formal registration with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugee ( UNHCR ). According to reliable information, there are four pregnant women and a teenager among the arrestees who were taken as illegal immigrants or prisoners to Lenggeng Immigration Detention Camp.
The raid started around 2.00am while everyone were asleep. The RELA and immigration authorities cordoned off the apartment compound where most of the Chin refugees were renting together in groups. In Malaysia, most Chin refugees rented a small flat together in order to minimize their expenses so that they can survive on until UNHCR find resettlement for them to third countries. Chin refugees in Malaysia only depend their daily life upon drudgery odd jobs they can work which are usually shunned by locals. However, as they all stayed in groups, they are easily spotted by authorities in daytime and surrounded them at night to avoid the local outcry against their harsh treatment of foreigners during the raid. Usually the authorities made urban raid against suspected illegal immigrants in Malaysia after midnight.
The Home Ministry announced earlier this year that the operation against illegal immigrants will start from February 15, 2010. Subsequently the ministry also announced that they will issue IDs for UNHCR recognized refugee so that they can escape arrest as other illegal immigrants in Malaysia. Malaysia enacted immigration law in 2002 which allowed " whipping" for all illegal immigrants. Malaysia is not a signatory to 1951 UN Convention on Refugee and therefore considers asylum seekers as illegal immigrants. The Chin refugees are one of various ethnic nationalities from Burma facing religious persecution for decades as 95% of them are Protestant Christians in Buddhist dominated country now called Myanmar.

Friday, March 12, 2010

UN calls for war crimes investigation in Burma

guardian.co.uk

Special rapporteur on human rights details 'pattern of gross abuses' as junta unveils restrictive electoral laws

Karen villagers take shelter in Thailand after fleeing Burma following attacks by the junta. Photograph: Free Burma Rangers/EPA

A senior UN official has called for Burma's military rulers to be investigated over allegations of crimes against humanity and war crimes perpetrated against Burmese civilians, in a move that will sharply increase pressure on the isolated regime ahead of controversial national elections due later this year.
In a draft report to the UN Human Rights Council [pdf] in Geneva, Tomás Ojea Quintana, special rapporteur on human rights in Burma, described "a pattern of gross and systematic violation of human rights" which he said has been in place for many years and still continued.
"There is an indication that those human rights violations are the result of a state policy that involves authorities in the executive, military and judiciary at all levels," he said.
The draft, published on the council's website, goes on: "The possibility exists that some of these [violations] may entail categories of crimes against humanity, or war crimes, under the terms of the statute of the international criminal court."
In this context, Quintana said the UN security council should consider setting up a "commission of inquiry with a specific, fact-finding mandate to address the question of international crimes".
The unusually tough assessment came as the junta today published a tranche of new electoral laws that restrict the ability of opposition parties to participate in the coming elections.
The special rapporteur said national elections, expected in October, provided an opportunity for positive change, but he was pessimistic that the junta would allow the chance to be seized.
"During his last mission [in February], the special rapporteur received no indication that all prisoners of conscience will be released, that freedom of opinion and association will be guaranteed in the context of these elections, and that ethnic communities will be able to fully participate," the report said.
The pressure group Burma Campaign UK today welcomed what it said was an unprecedented UN intervention, calling it a "major step forward" that would increase pressure on the US, British and regional governments to take a tougher line with the generals.
The US and EU have imposed limited sanctions on the regime. But since taking office last year, Barack Obama has pursued a policy of diplomatic engagement, holding several senior-level meetings. In a break with the past, Obama met General Thein Sein, the Burmese prime minister, at a regional summit in Singapore in November.
Analysts say Burma's military ties to North Korea are a major concern for Washington. It fears the generals may follow Pyongyang in developing nuclear weapons. The possibility of war crimes proceedings against members of the junta may complicate US efforts at dialogue, which are already under hostile fire in the US Congress.
Pressure to set up an international commission of inquiry into Burma has previously come from NGOs and activists involved in the country, and from Archbishop Desmond Tutu. In Britain, more than 170 MPs have signed a parliamentary motion calling on the British government to support an inquiry.
Burma's main opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD) led by the jailed Nobel peace prizewinner Aung San Suu Kyi, has repeatedly drawn attention to widespread, ongoing human rights abuses, including the jailing of 2,000 political prisoners. It also says the planned elections will not be free or fair.
The junta's unveiling of new restrictive electoral laws today has strengthened the impression that the polls will be closely controlled and designed to lend the regime a veneer of democratic respectability.
The new rules effectively prevent Aung San Suu Kyi and her jailed supporters from standing for election. They establish a government-controlled election oversight body with the power to prevent or annul voting in any part of the country for "security reasons". The junta has also formally declared the 1990 elections, which the NLD won in a landslide, to be invalid.
"Instead of passing laws that strip away more of their rights, the Myanmar [Burmese] authorities should immediately release all political prisoners," Amnesty International said. It said it was concerned that "activists are going to come under increased repression in the lead-up to the elections".
By allowing the NLD to reopen 100 regional offices closed since 2003, the regime appears to be hoping that, despite the restrictions, a decapitated opposition will participate in the poll, boosting the junta's credibility. This has created a dilemma for those NLD leaders who are not in jail. "I think they want us to take part in the election, but we still haven't made up our minds about this," said spokesman, Nyan Win.
He described new electoral provisions, such as a requirement that parties uphold the generals' gerrymandered 2008 constitution, as "completely unacceptable".
Tin Oo, the NLD deputy chairman, said the junta was trying to split the opposition. "They have been trying to decimate the party and now they are doing it with utmost force. But the NLD will never collapse."


Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Myanmar Military junta selling state assets

by The New York Times

YANGON - Myanmar's military government has begun the largest sell-off of state assets in the country's history, including more than 100 government buildings, port facilities and a large stake in the national airline, diplomats and businessmen here say.
The sell-off, analysts say, appears to be part of a political transition as the government introduces elections for the first time in 20 years and a new Constitution under which the military seems likely to perpetuate its rule, though more from behind the scenes.
Diplomats and businessmen say that the sales may allow ruling generals to build up cash for election campaigns to the new Parliament, where they will hold 25 per cent of seats, or to pay for salary increases for civil servants and other populist measures. Many of the assets are being sold to businessmen allied with the military.
But the privatisations could also have the effect of injecting some competition into what is an almost Soviet-style economic system, and some analysts here say they may herald a shift in direction.
Myanmar's military junta nationalised most industries when it took power in a 1962 coup and has controlled the lion's share of the economy since. Most major industries, like the telecommunications business, power plants, fuel distribution and health care, remain in the hands of the state.
The assets being sold include the country's fuel import and distribution network, gem and tin mines, farmland and factories, according to businessmen who have seen announcements of the sales.
The government has put out word that it is selling factories producing soft drinks, cigarettes and bicycles, among other commercial goods, according to Mr U Phone Win, the head of a non-profit organisation that assists people in rural areas.
It is also opening the healthcare and education sectors to private enterprise, Mr Phone Win said, issuing licences for the first time for private hospitals and schools. "There are opportunities here for the international business community," he said.
In recent days, the country's Privatisation Commission produced a list of 176 assets in Yangon, the main city, to be auctioned off sometime over the next few weeks. The 18-page list includes a wide-ranging roster of buildings in Yangon worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The buildings were abandoned when the capital was moved to Naypyidaw in 2005.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Malaysia, IOM Form Strategic Cooperation To Combat Human Trafficking

BERNAMA

PUTRAJAYA, March 9 (Bernama) -- Malaysia and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) will enhance their cooperation and expertise to tackle human trafficking cases effectively said Home Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein.
Hishammuddin said the relationship would be enhanced when IOM sets up a permanent office in Kuala Lumpur soon.
"The Ministry has no objection for IOM to set up a branch here....a working paper on the proposal will be presented to the Cabinet next week after approval from Wisma Putra," he told reporters after meeting IOM Director-General William Lacy Swing here Tuesday.
Hishammuddin said the cooperation with IOM would include training investigating officers and prosecutors involved in cases of human trafficking and migration.
"The cooperation will also reduce the time frame for acquiring such expertise and through expertise provided by the police and other agencies involved like the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency, services and efficiency can be improved," he said.
Established in 1951, IOM is the leading inter-governmental organization in the field of migration and works closely with governmental, inter-governmental and non-governmental partners.
With 127 member states, a further 17 states holding observer status and offices in over 100 countries, IOM is dedicated to promoting humane and orderly migration for the benefit of all and does so by providing services and advice to governments and migrants.
IOM works to help ensure the orderly and humane management of migration, to promote international cooperation on migration issues, to assist in the search for practical solutions to migration problems and to provide humanitarian assistance to migrants in need, including refugees and internally displaced people.
The IOM Constitution recognises the link between migration and economic, social and cultural development, as well as to the right of freedom of movement.
Meanwhile, William said: "Human trafficking and migration issues need a holistic solution and IOM is looking forward to expand the relationship with the Malaysian authorities."
William said IOM's desire was to be of service to the government and the people of Malaysia as the body was already working in many other countries around the world, in particular South East Asia, since there is a real opportunity to partner governments here.
Malaysia has registered 186 human trafficking cases in the last two years and from that total, 154 victims were women, 60 men and 17 children while 262 arrests were made during the same period.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

The "Settlers" and "Aborigines" of the Chittagong Hill Tract

Media
MONITORS

"The genocidal campaign by the Buddhist king led to a mass scale forced eviction and exodus of hundreds of thousands of people of Arakan to the nearby territories of British India, esp. to Chittagong and CHT districts of today's Bangladesh. Nearly a hundred thousand people, mostly Muslims, were killed by the Burmese extermination campaign. The Mahamuni statue of Buddha itself was stolen away from the Arakan. Many Muslims were taken as slaves and forced to live elsewhere, e.g., in places like the Karen State of Burma."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The subject of minorities is a very touchy one in any country, especially in nation-states where a national heritage or culture or identity (often dictated by the majority population) defines the characteristic of the state. Such modern concepts of states get complicated if there are other minorities that live in the state, each claiming to be a separate “nation” by virtue of its religion, language, culture, etc.
Bangladesh has about 12% religious minorities, including approximately 10% Hindus, the remainders being Buddhists, Christians, agnostics, atheists and animists. Roughly one percent of the population lives in the high hills, e.g., Jayintia, Garo Hills and Chittagong Hill Tract (CHT) districts. Historically the Bengal delta was husbanded by people who resorted to wet cultivation while the people in the hills, who were outside tax collection from ruling authorities, resorted to dry cultivation for their staple food. In the olden days of the Mughal rulers the authority of the state sometimes ended where the hills began. As we all know it was the marauding attacks from the Maghs (Arakanese Buddhists) and Portuguese pirates, which were sponsored by the Buddhist Kings of Arakan, that led to Shaista Khan's campaign to re-conquest Chittagong and its hilly districts, ensuring these territories' sovereignty within the Mughal rule. His campaign stopped shy of the present-day Arakan that demarcated itself from Bangladesh by the Naaf River. During the subsequent Nawabi rule of Bengal and British Raj the territorial boundary remained the same, i.e., both those districts remained integral to Bengal and outside Buddhist rules of Arakan, Burma and Tripura.
Unlike the Mughal and Muslim Sultanates of Bengal, the British Raj (esp. during the Company era) was more interested about collection of revenue and had little concern about the goodwill of the local people and their legitimate grievances whether or not such taxes were burdensome. It was their heavy handedness that led to the horrible famine of 1769-1773 (corresponding to Bangla Year 1176-1180, and more commonly therefore known as “Chiatturer monontor”) killing some 15 million people of Bengal (that included Bihar and Orissa). One in every three person perished in that great famine.
During the British Raj a more drastic and concerted effort was taken to reclaim hilly areas under taxation. In order to increase revenue collection, the Raj created local tribal chiefs in the Hilly districts, Rajas, who would ensure payment of such revenues. For the planes, it had by the 19th century already instituted a similar scheme of collecting revenues from the zamindars (not to be forgotten in this context the Sunset Law), who essentially became the enforcer of collecting such revenues in the form of money or kind (e.g., paddy) from the raiyats - peasants, and petty merchants. That is, the role of the zamindars was similar to a revenue collector in modern times.
The CHT districts with their deep forests, much like many other hilly parts of pre-modern era India, often became refuges to rebels and revenue- and tax-evaders who would settle (without its true connotation) there to escape from being hunted down by the ruling authority. In 1784 in the nearby Arakan there was a massive genocidal campaign that was steward-headed by the racist Buddhist king of Burma -- Bodaw Paya -- who had invaded the independent state. Arakan - the land of poets Alaol and Dawlat Kazi - had a significant population of Muslims (commonly known as the Rohingya people) who had lived in the other side of the Naaf River for centuries. [As shown elsewhere by this author, the origin of the Rohingya people of Arakan pre-dates the settlement of the Tibeto-Burman people there.]. The genocidal campaign by the Buddhist king led to a mass scale forced eviction and exodus of hundreds of thousands of people of Arakan to the nearby territories of British India, esp. to Chittagong and CHT districts of today's Bangladesh. Nearly a hundred thousand people, mostly Muslims, were killed by the Burmese extermination campaign. The Mahamuni statue of Buddha itself was stolen away from the Arakan. Many Muslims were taken as slaves and forced to live elsewhere, e.g., in places like the Karen State of Burma.
Those Rohingya Muslims who were able to save themselves from Burmese annexation of Arakan, like many Magh Arakanese, settled mostly in the Chittagong and CHT districts. The Muslim refugees and their descendants that had lived and settled in those places came to be known by the local name Ruhis, depicting their Rohingya/Arakan origin. During the Anglo-Burmese War of 1824-26, Arakan and subsequently the vast territories of Burma came under the British Rule. The exiled Rohingya/Ruhi Muslims and Maghs of Arakan, and their descendants, were allowed and encouraged to resettle in those territories south of the Naaf River. While many did return, others remained behind in Chittagong and CHT districts. The British policy and the subsequent process of return of the Arakanese exiles, esp. the hard-working wet cultivating Rohingya people, facilitated the cultivation of vast territories within Burma, which had hitherto remained barren and uncultivable. This enriched the coffer of the British Government through collection of revenues and taxes. Many descendants of the exiled Rohingyas (or Ruhis of Chittagong) would also become seasonal laborers in Arakan.
Today, the bulk of the ethnic minorities that live in the Chittagong Hill Tract districts are the descendants of those fleeing refugees from Arakan who fled the territory during Bodaw Paya's extermination campaign. They are our Chakma and Marma people. (There are two other ethnic minority groups living in the CHT - the Kukis and the Tripuras. The former are also known as the Chins in Burma and Mizo in India; while the latter lives mostly in the Tripura state of India.) [1] Their history to the territory cannot be traced with any authenticity before that historical event of 1784. This does not mean that there was no migration of people over the hills; in fact, there was migration in those days of porous borders where geography was not often attached with politics, state and administration. Like any nomadic people, the hilly people had no permanent settlement to the territory - they moved to and fro between porous borders of today's Bangladesh, Tripura (India) and Burma. Their migration from outside, much like the Ruhis of Chittagong and CHT, cannot be traced before 1784.
Since the British rule of the territories dating back to 1826, many Bengali Hindus, Buddhists and Muslims have moved to the CHT for a plethora of reasons, including administrative jobs, logging, trade and commerce, a trend that was to continue well unto the Bangladesh period with development of industrial infrastructure there.
After the emergence of Pakistan in 1947, the CHT was made part of East Pakistan. During the War of Liberation, its Raja (Tridib Roy) openly aligned itself with the Pakistan regime, thus leaving a strong sense of betrayal and mistrust between the local Bengali or Chittagonian people and the Hilly people. During the war of liberation and in the post-liberation era, many Bengalis were kidnapped and killed by the extremist elements of the Hilly people. [A close relative of mine was one such casualty who was kidnapped and later presumably killed, never to be found later.] Crimes of this nature continued unabated making the territory unsafe and insecure. Outside the towns, there was virtually no functioning of the government. The territory became impassable and unlivable for most Chittagonian and Bengali speaking people. They would be kidnapped, and often times killed, even when ransom money had been paid to the kidnappers.
The so-called Shanti Bahini comprising of armed hilly bandits and extremists demanded autonomy and they were aided and armed by anti-Bangladeshi forces from outside. With the assassination of Bangabandhu Sk. Mujib, as the political scene changed drastically inside Bangladesh, the Shanti Bahini had a new sponsor - India - to destabilize the country. This led to tense situation between the government of Bangladesh and the Hilly people, leading to the deployment of the BDR and Army. The era of instability persisted during the military-supported governments of Zia and Ershad when hundreds of soldiers and officers died fighting against the criminal hilly terrorists.
After the overthrow of the military dictatorship, the situation improved somewhat, especially with the signing of peace treaty in 1997 under the first Hasina administration which stipulated total and firm loyalty towards the country’s sovereignty and integrity for upholding the political, social, cultural, educational and economic rights of all the people living in the hilly region. Unfortunately because of its demography and geography, the region continued to see infiltration of arms from outside, which inevitably have gone to forces that are destabilizing the region. Thus, even to this day, criminal hilly gangs who are opposed to the peace treaty and armed by anti-Bangladeshi governments and NGOs continue to harass the local police, BDR and military outposts, and kidnap and kill Bengali-speaking population, including members of the local and foreign NGOs that work on various projects aiming to improve the economic and social condition there.
In the last two decades, the CHT has also seen the incursion of narcotics and harmful drugs from Burma and India. Outside drug-traffickers, the territory has also become a natural hideout for many refugees and secessionist groups from Burma that are opposed to the SPDC oligarchy. As noted elsewhere, some of the Arakan National Congress (ANC) member parties are terrorist organizations (e.g., ALP) and are heavily involved in drug trafficking. [2] It is worth noting that ANC is a racist, chauvinist, ultranationalist Rakhaine organization that opposes to Rohingya human rights. In the past they have carried armed excursions from the CHT against the hated SPDC regime ruling in Burma.
In recent years some NGOs have emerged with ulterior motives that are at odds with aspirations of the people and territorial integrity of Bangladesh. No place offers them a better venue than the Hilly Districts where a sizable number of ethnic minorities live. They want withdrawal of Bangladesh Army that has preserved the territorial integrity. They want enactment of fascist ghettoization laws that would confine a particular ethnic or religious group into living in enclaves or reserves. They want forced removal of Bengali Muslims and Hindus from the hilly districts. It goes without saying that such demands are unrealistic and are sure recipes for dismemberment of Bangladesh. Their anti-Bangladesh activities are also bolstered by some human rights activists with foreign affiliations whose agenda includes weakening the sovereignty of Bangladesh. Not to be forgotten in this context are also some local players that are opposed to the current government. The latest unrest in the CHT may well fall into their scheme to destabilize the government.
As Bangladesh government renews its pledge for harmony, territorial integrity and stability, it cannot afford to appear weak against forces that threaten its very existence. Any measure that offers exclusion over inclusion, ghettoization over pluralism, discrimination over equal opportunity is undesirable and must be avoided.
As hinted earlier, economics has been a key driver shaping the demography within our planet. And Bangladesh (whose GDP owes much to the foreign remittance of her economic labors working overseas) with scarcity of land is no exception to that grand rule. In the post-liberation period, with the sharp growth of job opportunities within the hilly districts, some Bangladeshis have settled into the CHT. Many hilly people likewise have found jobs in the planes of Bangladesh, away from their traditional homes in the hills. This is quite natural for a country whose constitution allows for pursuit of freedom of movement, employment, economic prosperity and happiness for all. With a high fertility rate among Bengalis and Ruhis, it is no accident that they are a majority in some Hilly districts today.
The Hilly people are aware of these trends and have immensely benefited from the overall economic prosperity of the region. Most of them are against the extremists within their community. They also understand that they are the best protectors and preservers of their language and heritage, something that is becoming rather difficult for small minorities in a global economy of our time. In that balancing act between preserving cultural heritages and ripping the benefits of economic prosperity they would be better advised to follow the American/Canadian Amish example as opposed to that of the Native Americans living in the Indian reservations. [3]
In closing, to qualify as an aborigine a member of an indigenous people must exist in a land before invasion or colonization by another race. More stringent definitions require that the aborigines have resided in a place from time immemorial; i.e., they are the true sons and daughters of the soil. [4] From this definition, the Koori, Murri, Noongar, Ngunnawal, Anangu, Yamatji, Nunga and other aboriginals in Australia, the Maori of New Zealand, the Uyghurs of Xinjiang Autonomous Region in China, the Chechens in Chechnya of Russia; the Siberian Tatars, Khanty, Mansi, Nenets and Selkup people of Siberia in Russia; the Native Indians of the USA and Canada, Eskimos of Canada and few other races in Central and South America are the true aborigines (or more correctly, aboriginals) of our world.
It is not difficult to understand why the British anthropologist T.H. Lewin (1839-1916) did not consider the tribal people living in CHT as aborigines. [5] The brief analysis above also confirms that view. Thus, the Mongoloid-featured hilly people are as much settlers to the CHT as are the Chittagonians/Ruhis and other Bangladeshis living there. Calling these latter people “settlers” while calling the Mongoloid featured Hilly people as the “adibashis” or aborigines would be false and insincere! Simply put: all the people living in the CHT are the adhibashis (residents) there.
Notes:
[1]. A Kuki website claims: “There are eleven ethnic multi-lingual minorities in the greater CHTs. They are Bawm, Pangkhua, Lushai, Khumi, Mro, Khyang, Chakma, Marma and Tripura. They have been divided in to three groups. The Bawm, Pangkhua, Lushai, Khumi and Mro, Khyang are Kuki-Chin or Kuki group. The Tripura, Riang are Tripura group and the Chakma, Marma, Tonchangya, Chak are Arakanese group. These groups differ from each other in terms of languages, customs, religious belief and patterns of social organization. The population of the hill people in the CHT is divided into as many as 3 groups who the numerically superior ones are Arakanese group and the second are the Tripura group. The Kuki group are the third in numerical strength. According to Prof. Bessaignet, among the Arakanese group, the Marma came in the CHT leaving the plain areas in 1826. The Tripura came in the CHT from the Tripura state of India. Kuki group, are called themselves as Tlangmi or hill people (they are Bawm, Pangkhua, Lushai, Khumi, Mro, Khyang). They are known as Chin in Burma and Mizo in India. The Kuki group linguistically and culturally differed from other valley-living people or Jumma (Arakanese and Tripura groups). They belong to the Kuki-Chin branch of the Tibeto-burman language family. They are unbriddled freedom nation. They live on the ridge of hills. They even used to choose different habitats for themselves for living from the early days of their community-life. So British administrator Captain T.H.Lewin designates them as ‘Tongtha’ (child of hill). According to Dr. Shelly - The Bengali movement into the CHT date back to the 17th century when braving the natural disadvantages, a small number of Bengal’s made their abodes in the inhospitable terrain of the region on an invitation of the Chakma chief.”
[2]. http://tinyurl.com/yaozwew
[3]. For American reservations, see, e.g., http://tinyurl.com/yaz3kd2 and http://tinyurl.com/y93u7mr. For life as an Amish, see, e.g., http://tinyurl.com/6kc9v5 and http://tinyurl.com/pjqj3
[4]. See, e.g., http://tinyurl.com/yekg826, and the article by A. M. Serajuddin – The Chakma Tribe of the Chittagong Hill Tracts in the 18th Century, Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, No. 1 (1984), pp. 90-98, http://tinyurl.com/yda95aj.
[5]. According to T. H. Lewin (1839-1916), British ethnologist and anthropologist, the Chakmas and Mongoloid people of CHT are not aborigines. His famous book is: Wild Races of the Eastern Frontier of India, http://tinyurl.com/yenzfyr; http://tinyurl.com/yeuohev.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Suhakam commissioner selection process a sham

Source: Malaysiakini

While the ongoing new process of selecting members of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (Suhakam) marks a seemingly relative improvement in the commission's compliance with international standards, Suaram expresses its concerns and disappointment over the current application of the new process.
Although the International Coordinating Committee of National Human Rights Institutions (ICC) has given Suhakam an 'A' status in November 2009 after considering the amendments made to the enabling law of Suhakam in July 2009, the international body will nonetheless once again review Suhakam's status in November 2010, in particular to assess whether the new selection process is applied in accordance with international standards.
In relation to this, Suaram regrets that the application of the new selection process has thus far been flawed since the beginning, with little or no regard paid to the principles of openness, transparency and inclusiveness.
Non-transparent appointment of selection committee members - The new selection process includes a five-member selection committee which will be consulted by the prime minister who will in turn advise the king on the selection of the commissioners.
Three persons from this five-member selection committee are to be representatives of civil society, as stated in the amended enabling law of Suhakam. However, in a letter from the Suhakam chairperson to Suaram dated Feb 4, 2010, it was revealed that the three members of civil society had already been appointed by the prime minister, without the knowledge and consultation of a majority of the civil society organisations working on human rights in Malaysia.
This realised civil society's initial concerns over the possibility of the prime minister's full discretion over these appointments when the new process was first introduced by the amendments to the enabling law of Suhakam last year. Until today, the names of the three civil society representatives have not been made public by the government.
Non-Inclusive nomination process - On Feb 12, the Prime Minister's Department sent out invitations to several civil society organisations, including Suaram, to nominate candidates to be considered in the selection of new Suhakam commissioners for 2010-2013.
The deadline set for the nominations is today, March 1, 2010. Suaram responded to this invitation by urging the Prime Minister's Department to open up the process to the public, including by putting up the nomination form on its website and making a public announcement of the opening of the nomination process, instead of just a inviting a selected few civil society organisations to nominate. This demand has yet to be met by the Prime Minister's Department to date.
Suaram will not nominate - Based on the flaws in the current application of the selection process as stated above, Suaram has decided not to nominate any names in the selection process. Suaram is of the view that its involvement in the process under current circumstances would lend its legitimacy to the entire process, which, in reality, has been flawed from the very beginning.
Attempts to deflect criticisms by civil society? - Suaram also questions the sincerity of the government in making the selection process a democratic, inclusive, transparent and open one, as well as in strengthening Suhakam as a whole.
While it is clear that the new selection process is largely to fulfill the requirements for the government to maintain Suhakam as an 'A' status national human rights institution under the ICC's accreditation, there is a possibility that this new process, which includes the participation of a selected number of civil society organisations, could be used to deflect criticisms by civil society towards Suhakam and the government for the failures of the commission. This because some members of the commission would be nominated by civil society.
Our demands - Nevertheless, Suaram remains committed in pushing for a truly open and transparent selection process as well as campaigning for the strengthening of Suhakam. Suaram thus reiterates some of the demands made in a letter by 29 civil society organisations to the government on Feb 24, 2010:

          . to make public the names of all members of the selection committee immediately;
          . to ensure a transparent, participatory and inclusive process, which includes making the names of candidates and their profiles public, as well as holding public interviews.
           . to ensure that the candidates selected are independent, impartial and professional with high integrity and recognised competence in the field of human rights. As it is imperative for Suhakam commissioners to have a solid understanding on human rights matters, the selection committee should select only those who have been involved in the protection and promotion of human rights in the country; and
           . to ensure that membership in the commission reflects a balanced representation of the genders. The candidates selected should represent different sectors, backgrounds, and thoughts of society to ensure pluralist representation.

Finally, Suaram stresses that it will only consider being part of such a process when – and only when – guarantees of inclusiveness, openness and transparency are firmly in place in the selection process.

The writer is coordinator, Suaram.