Burmese Refugees 'Treated Like a
Commodity'
By MARINA LITVINSKY / IPS WRITERMonday, April 27, 2009
After receiving disturbing
reports of trafficking in 2007, committee staff conducted a year-long review of
the allegations. The report, "Trafficking and Extortion of Burmese
Migrants in
Many Burmese migrants, escaping
extensive human rights abuses perpetrated by the State Peace and Development
Council (SPDC) and the Burmese military junta, travel to Malaysia to register
with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), for
resettlement to a third country, according to the report.
Once in
Upon arrival at the Malaysia-Thailand
border, human traffickers reportedly take possession of the migrants and issue
ransom demands on an individual basis. Migrants state that freedom is possible
only once money demands are met. Specific payment procedures are outlined, which
reportedly include bank accounts in
It has become commonplace for
the authorities to use the vigilante RELA force to periodically arrest and "deport"
Rohingyas, a Muslim minority, but since Burma does
not recognize them as citizens, the practice is to take them to the Bukit Kayu Hitam area on the Thai-Malaysia
border and force them to cross over into Thailand.
Migrants
state that those unable to pay are turned over to human peddlers in
Human rights activists have long
charged that immigration, police and other enforcement officials, have been "trading"
Rohingyas to human traffickers in
"People seeking refuge from
oppression in
The committee has received numerous reports of sexual assaults against Burmese women by human traffickers along the border. One non-profit organization official states that "Most young women deported to the Thai border are sexually abused, even in front of their husbands, by the syndicates, since no one dares to intervene as they would be shot or stabbed to death in the jungle." Women are generally sold into the sex industry.
"(The Burmese refugees) are
treated as a commodity and frequently bought and sold and we have been
condemning this practice for a long time," Irene Fernandez, executive
director of Tenaganita, a non-profit group that
protects migrant workers, told IPS in January. "Our demands have always
fallen on deaf ears despite the accumulating evidence of the involvement of
uniformed officials in the trade."
The report, the first of three, states
that
"
Foreign labor is an integral
building block of