Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Five Chin refugee women arrested in Immigration and RELA raid

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VOCR
30th September, 2009
Kuala Lumpur

By Salai C C,

On 29th September, 2009 evening, the immigration and People Volunteer Corp (RELA) invaded Chin refugee residence in Cheras Makota and three Chin refugee women, formally knows as Ms. Biak Chin Sung from Thau village and Tial Iang (Haka Town) and Sui Tin Thluai were arrested. The raid was begun around 5:30 PM and finished at 6:45 PM.

According to Chin Refugee Committee, “three women were taken to Putra Jaya immigration camp for further investigation and questioning. Among them, Ms. Biak Chin Sung is very pitiable because she was just released from Leng Kap immigration camp and she is now arrest again. After she escaped from long time imprisonment in Leng Kap camp, and spent only three days with her relative she got arrested a gain” one volunteer worker said.
Photo- charlshector
 
At the same time, two Chin refugee women formally known as Lyly Par and Iang Zi also arrested at their workplace in Sungai Long. Ms. Lyly Par, holder of RSD document which issued by UNHCR office in Malaysia is pregnant and also she has appointment with UNHCR office for further interview tomorrow. 

According to her husband, my wife is seven months pregnancy and she is almost to born a new baby but unfortunately, she is arrested being undocumented. About 5:30 PM I received a call from my wife and saying she has been arrested by immigration and RELA.

When ask did you manage to do anything for releasing your wife, he answered that as we have no right at all in Malaysia and cannot do anything I have to wait only UNHCR team intervention. I cannot consider that my wife will be detained until she born a new baby because, the camp authorities denied to access medical treatment for detainees and many of detainees has already died in the camp” he added.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Malaysia Chin Christian Youth Fellowship Assembly held successfully

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VOCR
23, September, 2009
Kuala Lumpur
 
by Salai C C,

”By the grace of God and through his guidance and protection Malaysia Chin Christian Youth Fellowship (MCCYF) Assembly was successfully held on 21 Sept, 2009. In the Assembly, the leaders divided three kinds of competitions such as Literature, singing contest (solo) and choir contest.

In literature contest, Avid Sing Cung Mang from Lautu Fellowship won first prize, Salai Za Hre Thang from Mi-E Fellowship second prize, and Mai Bawi Ram Iang from Zophei Fellowship third prize.

But Mai Tial Za Len from CCYF, Cheras won first prize in solo contest, Mai Sui Tin Par from CCYF, Puchong second and Mai Ma Kim from Matu Fellowship third. In choir contest, CCYF, Cheras won first place, Mi-E Fellowship second place, and Senthang Fellowship third place.


In a reported of one leader, 17 Fellowships were participated in the assembly. Among 17 Fellowships, 11 Fellowships could join choir contest. We had twice worship service and Rev. Bawi Thian Ting from FCC (Falam) was a speaker in the first time service but the second preacher was Rev. F. Za Thang from Mi-E fellowship.


”We believe that all who attended the service would be around 1500 persons. The Church is not big enough for all participants that some worshiped into the church and some into Hall next to the church through projector. Many persons came but no seat is left that they returned back” Salai Tha Hei said.

“Pu Zo Tum Hmung who visited us from USA also made a short speech in our service and we were very appreciated him. The main purpose and aim of the assembly is that we like to show that we are one in Christ and we are one in Chin” he continued.

“This is the scene of the second time MCCYF Assembly held on 21st September, 2009. It is God who guided and led the assembly joyful. The Assembly scene will be released in VCD tape. We would like to beg your prayer. It is beyond value that we could hold the Assembly in Malaysia amidst arrests and detentions” SHL Cinzah added.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Chin Refugee Detainee Died at Lenggeng Camp

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VOCR
18, September, 2009
Kuala Lumpur 
 
by Salai C C

Mr. Aung Lyn from Khua Kawng, Rezua Township died at Lenggeng Immigration camp on 15 September, 2009. Mr. Aung Lyn arrivied at Malaysia in February, 2007 and he stayed for more than two years in Malaysia. He was arrested on 29 May, 2009 in a raid of People Volunteer Corp (RELA), Immigration and Police at Putra Jaya where he worked.

According to the report of his brother, Mr. Aung Lyn was still healthy when he called him on 28 August but a moment later, his brother suddenly heard the news that Aung Lin died at the depot. His death is unbelievable and very difficult to bear for us, he added.

His fellow inmate also informed to Chin Refugee Committee, saying he was swelling and died within a few days. We believed that he might have been suffering from Meningitis. When he felt sick, his eyes became yellow and felt weak. A moment later, he died because he was neglected to admit to hospital for medical treatment by camp authorities.

After he died, his remaining was taken by the camp authority to Seremban hospital without giving information to any refugee organization and NGO so any organization could not know where the remaining was being kept. After three days, the Chin Refugee Committee came to know that his body was taken to Seremban Hospital. Fortunately, the body was released with the help of Chin refugee leaders without pay.

According to his relatives and villagers in Malaysia, one of Aung Lyn brother-in-laws also passed away at General Hospital, Kuala Lumpur on 17 July, 2009. He also was arrested for being undocumented and detained at Kajang Immigration camp. When he became sick, the camp authority admitted him to the hospital but he passed away a week later. He left his wife with seven months pregnancy, and the wife is being taken cared by the villagers in Malaysia.

An NGO, which helps the refugees, denounced the situation inside the detention camp that the camp authority always denies to access for medical treatment. The main infected diseases spread due to the drinking water and mice (rats), the NGO added. As the camp authority do not provided drinking water, the tap water is used for drinking which comes from dirty tank where dead rats are floating.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Malaysia NGO demand on immigration detention centre deaths

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malaysiakini.com - http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/113632

Several human rights groups have urged the government to curb the increasing number of 'death in custody' resulting from lack of proper health care and poor sanitary conditions.

In a joint statement today, 14 human rights groups claimed that the current immigration detention centers are in deplorable state.

According to them, most centers are overcrowded, poorly sanitized, had insufficient food and inadequate access to medical and health services.

In May, two Burmese asylum seekers died from Leptospirosis. Leptospirosis is an infectious disease that is caused by water or food contaminated by animal urine.

Yesterday, according to the NGOs, six more Burmese detainees died, allegedly from same the cause.

Last month, a Togolese detainee was reported to have died in the same detention centre from Influenza A (H1N1).

Conduct inquest on deaths
Among the actions that groups are calling upon the government authorities such as the Immigration Department and the Health Ministry is to conduct an inquest into the recent deaths of the Burmese detainees.

They recommended that the government make public the results of the post-mortem of all the detainees and to take immediate steps to prevent the spread of diseases to the others.

"The Ministry of Health should monitor the detention centres, set up permanent clinics at immigration detention centres and include foreign workers and refugees in health prevention programme," said the statement.

Meanwhile, the group is also pushing for the government to recognize refugee status, asylum seekers and stateless persons.

The group of 14 includes Amnesty International Malaysia (AIM), Bar Council Human Rights Committee, Malaysian Social Research Institute (MSRI) Suara Rakyat Malaysia (Suaram), Tenaganita and Women's Aid Organisation (WAO).

Monday, September 14, 2009

Myanmar's Chin people persecuted

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By DENIS D. GRAY

BANGKOK,

Thailand (AP) — The Chin people, Christians living in the remote mountains of northwestern Myanmar, are subject to forced labor, torture, extrajudicial killings and religious persecution by the country's military regime, a human rights group said Wednesday.

The New York-based Human Right Watch said as many as 100,000 people have fled the Chin homeland into neighboring India, where they face abuse and the risk of being forced back into Myanmar."The Chin are unsafe in Burma and unprotected in India," a report from the group said. The report said the regime in Myanmar, also known as Burma, continues to commit atrocities against its other ethnic minorities.Myanmar's ruling junta has been widely accused of widespread human rights violations in ethnic minority areas where anti-government insurgent groups are fighting for autonomy.


The government has repeatedly denied such charges. An e-mailed request for comment on the new report was not immediately answered.

Photo- CHRO
Chief Secretary Vanhela Pachau, a top official for India's Mizoram state, said he had not seen the report and could not comment."(The police) hit me in my mouth and broke my front teeth. They split my head open and I was bleeding badly. They also shocked me with electricity," the group quoted a Chin man accused of supporting the insurgents, who are small in number and largely ineffective.He was one of some 140 Chin people interviewed by the human rights group from 2005 to 2008. The group said the names of those interviewed were withheld to prevent reprisals.



A number of people spoke of being forced out of their villages to serve as unpaid porters for the army or to build roads, sentry posts and army barracks.Amy Alexander, a consultant for Human Rights Watch, told a news conference that insurgents of the Chin National Front also committed abuses such as extorting money from villagers to fund their operations.Alexander said Myanmar's government, attempting to suppress minority cultures, was destroying churches, desecrating crosses, interfering with worship services by forcing Christians to work on Sundays and promoting Buddhism through threats and inducements. Some 90 percent of the Chin are Christians, most of them adherents to the American Baptist Church.Ethnic insurgencies erupted in Myanmar in the late 1940s when the country gained independence from Great Britain.

Former junta member Gen. Khin Nyunt negotiated cease-fires with 17 of the insurgent groups before he was ousted by rival generals in 2004.Among rebels still fighting are groups from the Karen, Karenni, Shan and Chin minorities.At least half a million minority people have been internally displaced in eastern Myanmar as a result of the regime's brutal military campaigns while refugees continue to flee to the Thai-Myanmar border. More than 145,000 refugees receive international humanitarian assistance in Thai border camps.Alexander said that some 30,000 Chin have also sought refuge in Malaysia while about 500 were living in Thai border camps.

Bangladesh: Myanmar refugees weave together self-reliance and hope

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14 September 2009
In the remote Bangladeshi village of Faruk Para, 34-year-old Kil Cer, a Chin refugee from Myanmar, weaves a blanket under a self-reliance scheme funded by UNHCR.
FARUK PARA, Bangladesh, September 14 (UNHCR) – Kil Cer, a shy, petite 34-year Chin refugee from Myanmar, can be found every morning weaving blankets along with five other women in the village community centre in this remote lush green village in the Chittagong Hill Tracts.

But they're not just turning out the colourful traditional blankets their mothers and grandmothers have always made. In their own quiet way they've woven together a small-scale economic revolution in the settlement of 700, liberating their families from debt and dependence on handouts.

"I am happy now," says Kil Cer. "Before, it was a difficult struggle." Largely because of Kil Cer's weaving skills, her community has paid back all their debts. They are able to take care of their families without UNHCR's support and have invested money in other businesses, such as banana plantations, that also employ the local Bangladeshi host community, known as the Bawm.

"We speak almost the same language as they do and they have been very good to us," Kil Cer, a mother of two, says about her hosts.

Behind the success is a new UNHCR approach to developing self-reliance as part of UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres's focus on refugees living outside camps. Learning from earlier projects that gave grants to refugees who did not have the proper skills or business education to use the money properly, UNHCR began relying on the expertise of local businesses to develop the skills of refugees in Bangladesh living outside camps.

Eight months ago, Kil Cer and other refugees in the village were heavily in debt after many of their projects – small rice mills, grocery shops and farming – failed. For many years, they had relied on UNHCR to pay their rent and give them money for basic commodities. Even when Kil Cer tried to support herself with weaving, she was only able to earn US$2 per blanket – hardly enough to cover her expenses.



"Like many girls in Myanmar, I was taught to weave by my mother in Myanmar when I was 15 years old," she says. In Bangladesh, she began weaving blankets and passed on the skill to a few other young women, both refugees and Bangladeshis.

The turning point came when UNHCR introduced her to Samantha Morshed, chief executive officer of Hathay Bunano, a company that was already employing rural Bangladeshi women and other disadvantaged people to make soft toys for the international market under fair trade rules. She provided free professional advice to Kil Cer and her team on improving their products and marketing them, to make best use of a UNHCR start-up loan of US$250.




Today their offerings include shawls, scarves, ponchos, baby blankets, picnic blankets, bedspreads and bags marketed under Expression in Exile, a brand that is becoming popular with the urban elite in the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka. Within a month, they made a profit of US$800, a substantial amount for the residents of Farak Pura, and today demand is outstripping supply.
"I was excited when I first saw the blankets from Expression in Exile and am happy to give the group a little direction in terms of colours, sizes, pricing and raw materials," says Morshed. "I see no reason why these blankets cannot achieve mainstream export sales in the near future."


Now that her daily needs are taken care of, Kil Cer is already looking to a future she could scarcely have dreamed of a year ago. "I want to invest the money in my children's education," she says. Her 19-year-old colleague, Siang Khin Par, has similar high hopes: "I do this because I would like to be self-reliant. I would like to learn computing and English."
UNHCR Representative in Bangladesh Saber Azam says the programme is paying benefits not only for the refugees but for Bangladesh as well.


"Ensuring that refugees are able to take care of themselves and their communities is often a more humanitarian activity than giving them free hand-outs for years," he says. "Kil Cer has also demonstrated how refugees can help their Bangladeshi hosts rather than being a burden on them."
By Jelvas Musau in Faruk Para and Arjun Jain in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Sunday, September 13, 2009

The Rela raided Chin Refugees residences in Malaysia

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VOCR
13 September, 2009
Kuala Lumpur
 
by Salai C C,

This morning, at 8:00 am local time, People Volunteer Corp (RELA), Immigration and Police raided Chin refugees’ residences at Taman Maluri in Malaysia. Exactly, the raid was begun at 8:00 am local time and about 200 Chin refugees were arrested.

Generally, the raid was lead by the Rela and they entered every Chin refugees’ homes and arrested all the people both the UNHCR card holders, UNHCR‘s RSD document (Refugee Status Determination) holders and asylum-seekers (CRC card holders). All arrestees were taken to Taman Maluri police station nearby their residences by five Lorries for questioning.
Scene of Chin refugees leaving from police station

“As soon as we arrived to Police station the Police and Immigration checked our cards and luckily, they released us after 3 hour of checking and questioning. They released all UNHCR card holders and CRC card holders first. But those holding RSD documents were ordered to remain. After the Rela troop left, the police asked for money to those (RSD) document holders”. But some paid and some refused. But all were released except seven newly arrived refugees, who are undocumented were taken by RELA and still unknown where they are being detained.

During this raid Rela arrested 10 children including four months and five months old babies.

A chin refugee woman sexually abuse by police

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VOCR
13 September, 2009
Kuala Lumpur
 
by Salai C C,
A Chin refugee’s woman in Puchong formally known as Sung Sung was sexually harassed by the two police at local time 11:00 AM on 08, August, 2009 while she was shopping at Mini Market near from her house in Banda Putri, Puchong.

Ms. Sung Sung is a housewife and she has eight months old child. She was recognized refugee and she had done medical check up under UNHCR schedule for refugees. The incident was happened on day time while the husband was working at different palace.

She said that the two polices without uniform came to our block and they called me and asked me to show Malaysian IC. Because I am not local woman and as I have nothing to show I take-out the UNHCR card and I show them. But the two polices were laugh at me and saying this card is useless and you can do nothing with this card inside our country. They onboard me inside the car and the Malay man flirted my whole body.

Not only the Malay man flirt my whole body but also asked me to show my wallet which contains RM 38 and he took ten Ringgit. He also scolded me and asked me to bring them at my home, but later on, his fellow prohibited him to do so. After his fellow advised him not to be done I was released from this cruel ordeal.

“Even though we the Chin refugee women are not involved at prostitution we have encountered sexual harassment. I am very shameful with my husband. I don’t like all the Chin refugee women to be encountered this kind of sexual harassment” she continued.


The Chin Refugee Committee (CRC) refers this case to UNHCR office and the UNHCR has done interview with Sung Sung regarding this matter. But they had not received any information from the UNHCR office yet.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Jungle colony worrying residents

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By LIM CHIA YING
 
The presence of a settlement of foreigners hidden in the jungles of Kepong hill, near Segambut, is causing much fear and concern among residents in the area.
 
The hill is a popular spot for joggers and trekkers, but deeper into it are wooden huts and houses sheltered by bushes and overgrown trees.

Angus Ng, who lives in Taman Flora Impian housing area just a short distance down the foothill, said many residents and their families felt their safety was being threatened by the existence of the foreigners.

“If these foreigners are involved in crime, we will take action. If they are illegals, we have to seek the assistance of the Immigration Department. But we are not the only ones responsible to book them as the City Hall and other authorities are involved, too,” he said. 

“As we are a guarded community, our security personnel said these foreigners would come down from the hill in the wee hours of the morning. Even one of our security men was threatened and slashed,” said Ng, who is the Flora Impian action committee pro tem chairman.“What we want is for the authorities to take action to demolish the settlement, and take the landowner to court if the squatters being harboured here are indeed illegals,” he said.

 It is learnt that the hill also connects to various other residential townships including Sg Penchala, Desa ParkCity, Bukit Lanjan, Bukit Segambut, Sri Hartamas and Mont Kiara.Segambut MP Lim Lip Eng said from his own experience of climbing up the hill recently, he could hear chirping noises like that of birds before reaching the area, only to learn later that the sounds were made by humans. 

“The sounds are made by colony members to alert their own people that there are ‘outsiders’ like us coming in,” said Lim.
Our play area: This looks like a makeshift playground amid the wooden homes in one of the foreign colonies that the residents ventured into

A resident said there were probably more than 50 wooden houses for this one colony, including a place of worship heavily guarded by dogs. We believe there are more entrenched deeper,” the resident said.


Sentul OCPD Asst Comm Zakaria Pagan said he would immediately check on the matter and take the necessary action.


Thursday, September 10, 2009

Interview with Chin detainee detained in Kawhtaung

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VOCR
10 September, 2009
Kuala Lumpur 
 
by Salai C C
Mr. Ni Cung (40) was arrested with others four Chin fellows on 15. 08. 2009 and detained for two months in Ayemyakantha township councilor office in Kawhtaung. In his detaining period, the authorities did not provide commodity and enough food. He was suspected as ceasefire arm group even though he has Burmese national identity card. After detaining at township councilor office in Kawhtaung, they broke the office wall and ran away to Malaysia for safety and he arrived at Malaysia on 6th September, 2009. .


VOCR: Could you tell me your name and which part of Chin state are you from?

NC: My name is Ni Cung. I am from Belhar village, Thantlang Township, northern part of Chin State.

VOCR: Where did the Myanmar Immigration arrested you? How long and where were you detained?NC: I was arrested when our plane from Yangon landed at Kawhtaung airport and I was taken to Ayemyakantha township councilor office for further investigation. I had been detained for almost two months in that office.
VOCR: While in detention, did the immigration provide you commodity and enough food?
NC: No, absolutely not. They didn’t provide anything. They told us to buy food ourselves. If we begged them to buy us food, they scolded us and kicked us.

VOCR: If the authorities did not provide you food, how did you survive in your detention period and what actually did you eat?NC: As we have no relatives in Kawhtaung to come and visit us, we bought food with our own money. Food also was very expensive that we could eat only one time per day.
VOCR: If you don’t have any relatives in Kawhtaung, to whom did the authorities inform that you are under arrest?
NC: I think that the authorities did not inform to anyone because we were isolated and were being suspected as (MNLA) Mon National Liberty Army which made ceasefire with the military regime recently.“Even though they recognized us as Chin ethnicity which also is shown on our Identity card, we were suspected and questioned like insurgent group”.
VOCR: You said that four Chin fellows also were arrested at the same time. Consequently, do you know where they were taken to and were detained? Do they have Burmese identity card?
NC: They also detained with me including seven years old child. We all have identity cards but the captain who questioned us denied our identity cards. In questioning room, the captain also said that our identity cards were invalid and lured us to show MNLA cards.
VOCR: In your detention period, did you see other ethnic minorities like Kachin, Shan etc. who were detained under such cases?
NC: Yes. Many other ethnics also were arrested but they detained for only two or three days. After three days, the authorities demanded them to pay 55,000 kyat for their release. If they could pay the demand, they were repatriated. But we were not demanded to pay money for our release. Even if we tried to explain that we were able to pay 55,000 kyat like other ethnic detainees, the authorities refused our claims.
VOCR: Can you explain me how did you escape?
NC: After we had been detained for almost two months, I explained all my friends that we would be detained for a long time since we were subjected as insurgent case. I also suggested them to find out the way to escape. One night, we broke the office wall and ran away to monastery which is located on the hill. The monks did not allow us to stay in the monastery. At that time, it was raining heavily but we stayed under the heavy rain because we got no place to take refuge. After two days in the forest around Kawhtuang, we headed our journey to Malaysia and arrived on 6th September, 2009.
VOCR: Thank you very much for giving us your time. May your dream come true!NC: Same to you.

CHIN REFUGEES IN INDIA COME UP AGAINST A HARD NUT TO CRACK

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Salai Pautu

DELHI
New Delhi: A considerable number of Chin refugees being recognised in 2008 and 2009 by New Delhi- UNHCR , come up against a major problem of registering themselves at a New Delhi branch of the Foreigners Regional Registration Office ( FRRO) , that is the government office which registers foreigners in India and applying for Residential Permits in order to stay in India.

India has not ratified either the 1951 Refugees Convention or the 1967 Refugees Protocol. India also does not have its own domestic refugee law... according to HUMAN RIGHT FEATURE.
 
By virtue of his\ her presence in India, every refugee is subject to Indian laws. He \ She should conduct himself \ herself accordingly at all times. As India has no refugee specific law, his \ her entry, stay and departure are regulated under the laws applying to all foreigners in India.One of his \ her primary duties under the laws is to register himself \ herself and his \ her family members at the Foreigners Regional Registeration Office and apply for a Residential Permit in order to stay in India. His \ her failure to do so may result in his \ her arrest, detention and possible deportation according to New Delhi- UNHCR.
 
What the 2008 and 2009 newly recognised Chin refugees being in course of applying for Residential Permits in order to stay in India, started to have been asked for cash payments on their previous presence ( while they were asylum seekers) in India by the FRRO officials is the major problem they encounter these days.

The FRRO officials said that to ask refugees in India for cash payments on their previous presenc in India is a rule. Then, they started doing so from the mid- year of 2008.

The cash payment on each refugee's previous presence in India being asked for is worked out at Rs. 25 each per day starting from his\ her arrival date to his\ her refugee recognition date in the New Delhi - UNHCR office. As a rule, New Delhi- based most Chin asylum seekers become recognised refugees after one year or more of registeration at the UNHCR office.For instance, if an asylum seeker and his\ her detofacto partner acquire their recognition refugees status one year of registeration at the office, they shall have to make paymants of Rs.16000-17000 to the FRRO officers so as to come by the Residential Permits issued by the FRRO office.



Around 1995's and 2005's were the years in which the FRRO officials felt sympathetic towards refugees in India ,so regestering refugees at the FRRO and applying for Residential Permits were somewhat easy just like a childplay according to a source.

However, since the mid - year of 2008, everything different that has come up to all newly recognised Chin refugees in India has brought them all dealing with this major problem. The Chin refugees, especially those who live from hand to mouth,have no approach neck and crop to this problem the FRRO officials created. According to sources, there is disagreement among the FRRO officials --- some of them do not wish to ask refugees for payments on their previous presence in India while others really do.


A Chin refugee family in New Delhi (Photo AFP)

Chin refugees while in the FRRO office faced up to harsh words spoken to them by one of the FRRO officers at the reception desk who asked them a question of what nationalities belong to them.When they replied, " Burmese", he just asked them whether they had brought the payments to be paid to him or not. They replied, " NO" , then he at once said to them, " Go home!" in an angry manner. The Chin refugees felt small confronting this unfriendly situation.

As a matter of concern, those Chin refugees without holding the Residential Permits Certificates have no legal right in India --- to remain in India as well as no Exit Permit---- to leave for any third country. Instead, the consequences of their lack of the Residential Permits Certificates can render them face the things thay fear most. Accordingly, they are all in need of the legal protection and the immediate action to be taken on their problem. No action has been effectively taken on their desperate problem so far.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

NGO set up mobile clinic for refugees

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VOCR
06 September, 2009
Kuala Lumpur
 
by Salai C C

On 3rd and 4th of September, one of local NGOs called A Call to Service (ACTS) set up mobile clinic in Malacca and Muar where many refugees live. ACTS in one of local NGO and based in Kuala Lumpur and it provides medical treatment to both legal and illegal foreigners in Malaysia.

The mobile clinic was conducted by two doctors and some volunteer workers from ACTS main office.
 
On the first day, only 15 of Chin refugees attended in mobile clinic to receive medical treatment because they had difficulties for transportation, as they stay in different places. But on the second day, the clinic set up at Saint Peter Church the downtown in Malacca and more than 50 patients from different places attended including Vietnamese and Indonesians. On that day, five volunteer workers from CRC also joint as interpreters for Chin refugees patients. After the patients in Malacca had been finished examining their health and received medical treatment, the mobile clinic teams sifted to Muar, about 60 kilometers away from Malacca.
 
When the mobile clinic team arrived to Muar, the Emanuel Church in Muar hailed them. Besides, the church also was offered as a clinic. In Muar, only 15 Chin refugee patients and some Nepalese could attend it.

“Many refugees have been suffering from variety of diseases, such as Tuberculosis, Kidney problem, scratch and womb problem. This is reliable for the Chin refugees who stay out of Kuala Lumpur area as they could not approach hospital” one volunteer worker said.

Last month, the ACTS had already conducted mobile clinic for Chin refugees in Cameron Highland and we hope that would be continued it.

Nowhere is safe for Chin refugee in Malaysia

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VOCR
06 September, 2009
Kuala Lumpur
 
by Salai C C

The UNHCR office in Malaysia has been registering the Chin refugee for more than two months but arrest and detention among the Chin refugee is increasing day by day. Even in Jalan Imbi and Pudu areas where two Chin refugee’s offices CRC and ACR are located, police without uniform came and walked along the road and they arrested many Chin refugees.

Jalan Imbi,where many of Chin refugee are staying

“Even if the Chin refugees are arrested they are not detained or sent them to the camp because the Malaysia camps are struck with Burmese detainees. They (the police) informed to their relatives or community offices and asked to fine the money” one anonymous said.


“Everyday, many police come to Jalan Imbi and they stopped the chin refugee pedestrians and confiscated their money. I arrived to Malaysia since 1999 and I have been staying for more than ten years in Malaysia but I had never seen the situation like this. They tough us like alien. Even the animal has a shelter but nowhere is safe for Chin refugees in Malaysia” one person who stays more than ten years in Malaysia said.

According to one of eye witnesses “It is so difficult to understand that how the police can come every day instead of going to duty at the police station. Everyday, the police who came to Jalan Imbi are the same. I guess they may not have enough salary for living. They really don’t like the people to arrest but confiscated their money” she said.
The two police arresting two of Chin refugees on their way home from work place and they
confiscated their own money.
 

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