Emergency appeal to the Royal Thai Government not to forcibly repatriate Karen refugees back to heavily land-mined zone

The Karen Women Organization is urgently appealing to the Royal Thai Government not to forcibly repatriate over 3,000 Karen refugees staying in Tha Song Yang, Tak Province, back to a heavily land-mined war-zone in Burma. The majority of the refugees are women and children.

This group of refugees have been told by the Thai Army that they must all be returned to Burma by February 15. The refugees were told that actions to remove them will begin on February 5th, this week. They are now living in fear of imminent forced repatriation into an area which is heavily land-mined, and where active conflict can re-ignite at any moment.  

On January 28, the local Authority  Thai Army and his men forced 50 refugees from this group back across the border between 9 to 11 am to start cleaning up their homes in the village of Ler Per Her in preparation for their return. This included 20 women and girls, some under 16 years of age. 

However, KWO would like to state clearly that this area is not safe at all and refugees groups are not willing to return at this point in time. In recent months, five refugees from the area have been either injured or killed by landmines when slipping back into Burma to look after livestock they left behind. This included a 13-year-old boy whose leg was blown off in August last year, and a woman who was 8 months pregnant had her foot blown apart on January 18, 2010. 

Blooming Night Zan, Joint Secretary 1 of KWO said, "This evidence of people stepping on the landmines is a sure sign that the situation is still very dangerous. Sending refugees back against their will into such a dangerous situation violates the international law of non-refoulement. Although the Thai government is not a signatory of the Refugee Convention, the KWO is very grateful to His Majesty the Thai King, and the Thai government, for a long history of kindness to refugees. We appeal to the Thai authorities now to show your humanitarian kindness again."

The Karen refugees fled from fighting in the Ler Per Her area in Karen State, Burma, in June 2009. The refugees were granted temporary refuge in three locations, Mae U Su, Mae Salit and Nong Bua, but have not yet been allowed to move to Mae La refugee camp in Tak Province. Since their arrival, local Thai authorities have repeatedly pressured the refugees to return home despite evidence that the area is still very dangerous.

The Karen Women Organization is gravely concerned at the planned forced repatriation of these refugees into such a dangerous area and we urgently appeal to the Royal Thai Government to halt the repatriation and continue to provide these refugees with protection on Thai soil.

Source: 

www.karenwomen.org

Comments

PPT quotes the Irrawady

PPT quotes the Irrawady quoting the Bangkok Post:

Phop Phra police linked to killings

Officers from the Phop Phra police station have emerged as suspects in the killing of at least nine Karen workers from Burma whose bodies have been found in the past week.

The bodies were found in two different locations in two districts of northern Tak province.

Autopsy results show all nine were shot with a .22-calibre gun.

A source said officers at the Phop Phra district police station were suspected of involvement in the killings.

Police said 13 illegal migrant workers from Burma and their traffickers were arrested in tambon Khiri Rat in Phop Phra some time last month.

One worker questioned by police said he witnessed the killings and saw police officers leave the workers alone before a group of gunmen in plain clothes emerged and executed the workers.

The witness could not be sure whether the killers were police officers.

Thai Police Suspected in Murder of Karen Job Seekers

The migrants had reportedly been arrested in the Phop Phra area and had tried to bribe the police for permission to stay in Thailand, The Bangkok Post reported, quoting one local source.

The gunmen demanded 1,000 baht (US $33) from each of the group, but killed nine of the migrants when they had difficulty raising the money, one local source told The Irrawaddy.

One local worker told The Bangkok Post he had seen a group of gunmen in plain clothes execute the migrants. The police had left the migrants alone, he said.

PPT omits the detail of the witness' equivovation concerning the identity of the gunmen and the Irrawady alludes to obliquely.

Do we draw the same conclusion, that a worker who had seen the killings might understandably specify uncertainty as to whether the shooters were cops when questioned by the cops, whether he knew them to be cops or not?

They used to say that even paranoids have enemies and it is possible that the gunmen who emerged after the police questioned the victims were just passing by.

Surely this detail was furnished the Bangkok Post by the police. As surely there will be zero follow-up. Is the witness still alive, even now?

If it wasn't the cops pulling

If it wasn't the cops pulling the trigger, it seems they arranged it.

Abhisit Vejjajiva in December

Abhisit Vejjajiva in December 2008 highlighted in a parliamentary speech that one priority of his government would be to promote the “respect of human rights”. Perhaps Abhisit does not consider the Rohingya, Hmong and the Karen are human.

http://gjbkk.wordpress.com/2010/02/03/karen-refugees-repatriation-will-begin-on-feb-5/

PPT has a link to Irrawady...

PPT has a link to Irrawady... news of a dead witness to the 9 murders of Karen immigrants.

Thai Police Suicide Linked to Karen Killing

Pol Sen Sgt Maj Somchai Pinkaew, a police officer at Phop Phra district police station who admitted to being involved in the killing of nine Karen job-seekers, committed suicide on Jan. 30, a police official said at a press conference in Tak Province on Wednesday.

Provincial Police Bureau 6 chief Surasi Sunthornsarathoon told the Bangkok Post on Thursday that the officer had admitted to killing the Burmese workers while in the company of five hilltribe men. The five hilltribe men were former Haw Chinese soldiers and an ethnic Lisu named Sai, Yozu, Laota, Epu, Zotu and Fofang, the report said.

Dead men tell no tales so the cops will undoubtedly stick to their story of "Haw Chinese soldiers"... Maybe the cop who went down was the one with the fewest friends in the station. Maybe he was "elected" to take one for the corps. In any case, any other cops involved seem safe now.

Too bad. So sad. We'll all forget it in a week or two.

The Burmese and Thai militaries are pooling their interests. Front-man Abhisit is smiling and mugging for the camera. Like frogs in a slow-boiling pot on a stove we relax and enjoy the unseasonably warm water.