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Basicofislam
01-24-2009, 05:15 PM
Thailand accused of mistreating Muslim refugees
Nearly 1,000 refugees were detained on a remote island in December before being towed out to sea and abandoned with little food or water, rights group says.
By Simon Montlake | Correspondent
from the January 23, 2009 edition


BANGKOK, THAILAND - Hundreds of Muslim refugees from Burma (Myanmar) are feared missing or dead after Thai troops forced them onto boats without engines and cut them adrift in international waters, according to human rights activists and authorities in India who rescued survivors. The revelations have shone a spotlight on the Thai military's expulsion policy toward Muslims it sees as a security threat.

Nearly 1,000 refugees were detained on a remote island in December before being towed out to sea in two batches and abandoned with little food or water, according to a tally by a migrant-rights group based on survivors' accounts and media reports. The detainees, mostly members of Burma's oppressed Rohingya minority, then drifted for weeks. One group was later rescued by Indonesia's Navy, and two others made landfall in India's Andaman Islands.

Photos of refugees on a Thai island show rows of bedraggled men stripped to the waist as soldiers stand guard. In a separate incident, foreign tourists snapped pictures of detainees trussed on a beach. Thailand's Andaman coastline, where the abuses took place, is a popular vacation spot.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has launched an investigation. Military officials have denied any ill treatment of refugees, while offering conflicting accounts of how they ended up lost at sea. The military has accused the Rohingya, who often travel via Thailand to Malaysia to work or seek asylum, of assisting a Muslim-led insurgency in southern Thailand.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is pressing Thailand for access to 126 Rohingya that it says are in Thai custody. These include 46 boat people reportedly detained on Jan. 16 and handed over to military custody. It said a second group of 80 Rohingya, which reportedly had previously been pushed out to sea and drifted back, had been transferred to the tiny detention island.

There was no sign Thursday of any detainees there, said a Western source in the area. Villagers said boat people had been held there by local guards under military command, before being towed out to sea by fishing vessels. Rickety vessels said to have carried the refugees were beached on the island, the source said.

Amid accusations of a military cover-up, the Thai government has promised a full accounting. "The military has agreed to a fact-finding investigation … [but] we're not dependent on their input alone," says Panitan Wattanyagorn, a spokesman.

That probe will expose Mr. Abhisit's weak command of the military, which sees the Rohingya and other undocumented Muslims as a threat, says Paul Quaglia, director of PSA Asia, a security consultancy in Bangkok. He says there's no evidence that the Rohingya, who speak a Bengali dialect, have joined insurgents in the Malay-speaking south, where more than 3,500 people have died since 2004.

"Abhisit is ... beholden to the military for getting his job – and keeping his job," he says.

Thailand has long been a magnet for millions of economic migrants as well as refugees escaping persecution in Burma, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam. Human traffickers often play a role in transporting both groups, exposing those on the run to egregious abuses. Thailand has a mixed record on hosting refugees.

Most Rohingya, who are denied legal rights in Burma, begin their journey in Bangladesh, where more than 200,000 live in unofficial camps. A further 28,000 are registered with the UNHCR. From there, men pay smugglers for passage across the Indian Ocean to Thailand, usually as a transit stop to reach Malaysia, a Muslim country with a sizable Rohingya population. Some Bangladeshis also travel there.

In recent years, the number of boats crossing during the winter months has risen sharply. Between 2004 and 2008, the number of Rohingya detained by police rose to 4,866, up from 2,763, says Kraisak Choonhavan, a government lawmaker.

Some of these Rohingya have been repatriated to Burma. Others have paid smugglers to complete their journey to Malaysia, or become victims of traffickers, say rights activists. That appears to have changed as the military has got involved.

In security briefings, military officials repeatedly draw a link between Rohingya refugees and separatist violence in the south, says Sunai Pasuk, with Human Rights Watch, which has received reports of sea "pushbacks" since 2007. "This is not just an isolated incident. There must be a policy behind it," he says.

Mr. Kraisak, a deputy leader of the ruling Democrat party, criticized the violation of human rights. But he said the outflow of refugees from Burma was a problem that Thailand can't handle alone. "We have to confer on the international stage. Thais have been too tolerant," he says.

In interviews with Indian security officials, survivors said uniformed Thai personnel shot four refugees and tossed another into the sea before forcing their group to board a wooden barge. Some 400 crowded onto the barge, which was towed to sea for about 18 hours with armed soldiers aboard. They shared two bags of rice and two gallons of water, according to a transcript in the South China Post.

The barge drifted for more than a week. Of 300 people who tried to swim to shore, only 11 survived. An additional 88 were rescued by the Coast Guard.

xSharingan01x
01-24-2009, 06:15 PM
:salam2:

They don't like Muslims since southern Thai region is mostly Muslims and are trying to secede from the country.

It's sad my country (Bangladesh) didn't due enough to help the Rohyinga Muslims of Burma when they were persecuted by Burmese military junta. In the mid 1990s they did provide bases for Rohyinga fighters to launch attack against the Burmese.

It's a shame I'm not the Prime Minister of Bangladesh, I would invade entire Burma for persecuting Muslims*.

:wasalam:



Thai, Malaysian war of words heats up
By Baradan Kuppusamy

KUALA LUMPUR - A diplomatic row between Thailand and Malaysia over the fate of 131 Thai Muslims who fled to Malaysia in August, allegedly to escape ethnic violence and repression, has worsened as it begins to gain international attention.

Indeed, Thailand insists that the "escape" of the refugees was engineered by separatist Muslim militants precisely to drag United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) into the ethnic conflict simmering in its southern provinces of Narathiwat, Yala and Pattani.

Thailand's Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra wants the UNHCR



to stay away from the villagers, who fled following violence and counter-insurgency operations by Thai armed forces in and around their village in Narathiwat, and not grant them refugee status.

Malaysia, on the other hand, says the UNHCR should be allowed to carry out its humanitarian mission and insists that Thailand guarantee the safety and rights of the villagers, now held at an immigration detention camp, before they can be returned home.

The positions of both countries hardened this week with words exchanged between leaders through their respective media. The flap is developing into a standoff that is affecting the sometimes choppy bilateral relations.

Thailand has accused Malaysia, which shares a border with the three Muslim-dominated southern provinces, of aiding and sheltering separatist insurgents. Malaysia denies those charges.

"It is a serious row - the two countries should open discussions and settle their differences amicably," a political scientist, Murugesu Pathmanaban, said. "There are many mechanisms available, bilateral as well as multilateral."

Despite warnings from Thaksin not to "interfere" in Thailand's domestic affairs, the UNHCR has completed interviewing the villagers who include 21 women as well as 49 children ranging in age from five months to 17 years.

So far, the UNHCR has refrained from announcing the results of the interviews, which included key questions such as what prompted the villagers to flee, whether they feared for their safety on return and whether they are indeed eligible for refugee status.

Thaksin is sure to react furiously if the UNHCR decides they are refugees since this will allow the 131 villagers to remain in Malaysia.

Such an outcome is bound to be favored by many Malaysian Muslims, who form the majority in this country of 25 million people. Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi is under pressure from Muslims, who backed him overwhelmingly in the 2004 general election, to "save and protect" brother Muslims in Thailand.

Bilateral relations have been souring largely because both countries, instead of talking to each other directly and in earnest, have preferred to talk through their respective national media and to their own galleries.

The result has been rising political temperatures with almost weekly demonstrations in Malaysia joined in by even moderate Muslims protesting against Thaksin's hard-line policies against Thai Muslims.

Already Muslims have launched a Malaysia-wide boycott of Thai products. The issue is further complicated because almost all of the villagers hold dual Malaysian and Thai citizenship - a common condition in the border areas.

Similarities of culture, language and religion as well as historical ties add to the problem. Thai Muslims naturally look to Malaysia for help, and most Malaysians expect their government to back them.

Thaksin has not helped matters by describing the protestors as belonging to the "same pack of villains" as the Muslim separatists.

Like the Malaysian government, the UNHCR is also caught between fulfilling its humanitarian mission and threats from Thailand not to interfere in its domestic affairs.

"Given the current sensitive situation in southern Thailand, the UNHCR has decided to withhold any public pronouncement on the status of the 131 southern Thais currently in Malaysia," UNHCR spokesman Ron Redmond said.

Last week, Thailand's Foreign Affairs Ministry summoned the Malaysian envoy in Bangkok and lodged a strong protest against Malaysian Foreign Minister Syed Hamid's statement that Malaysia would only return the refugees if Bangkok can guarantee their safety and human rights.

Thaksin upped the ante this week, rejecting a suggestion by Syed Hamid that both countries open discussion on the future of the 131 villagers, a dialogue the foreign minister believes will clear the air.

"The talks are unnecessary," Thaksin said before leaving for a one-week visit to the European Union. "The circumstances are not so pressing as to warrant a meeting. It is all a matter of procedure."

"The plight of Thai Muslims has become an emotive issue here - Abdullah has to balance pressure from [the] domestic audience to act as protector of Muslims and at the same time maintain [a] good relationship with Thailand," a prominent political analyst told IPS on condition he not be identified because he has sensitive links with both countries. "The problem is not Thailand but Thaksin."

Abdullah's soft-spoken, mild-mannered and fatherly ways contrast sharply with Thaksin's comments, which are sometimes seen as callous.

Political analysts see the contrasting styles and the age gap between the two leaders as one reason why the war of words has been escalating and why so much bad blood has surfaced since the separatist violence surged last year.

More than 1,000 people have been killed in escalating violence, shooting and bomb blasts since the March 2004 kidnap and murder of prominent Muslim lawyer Somchai Neelaphaijit, widely believed to have been killed by his police abductors.

It is is difficult to put a finger on who is behind the violence that is causing hardship to the 6 million Thai Muslims, but atrocities like Neelaphaijit's murder have not helped.

Nor has the gruesome deaths by suffocation of 78 Muslim boys and men while in custody in October last year helped the situation. They had been arrested in Narathiwat for demonstrating against police abuse.

For his part, Thaksin blames the escalating trouble on a mixture of separatists, gangsters and rogue generals.

Nearly 80% of those killed are ordinary civilians - mostly rubber tappers, shopkeepers and civil servants. Tourist arrivals, mostly from Malaysia, have dropped dramatically. Traders have closed shops and left. Hotels are empty and schools are shut.

The insurgents show confidence and pick targets at their leisure, killing and maiming police and troops with bomb attacks and roadside ambushes before melting back into the local population.

Muslim disaffection against the Thai state has grown since the southern provinces, once part of the defunct Muslim kingdom of Pattani, were annexed by Siam (as Thailand was known) in 1902.

Successive military regimes and elected governments in Thailand, with policies aimed at steamrolling over regional identities in a drive to build a unified Thai identity, have steadily fueled resentment among the Muslims.

Their Islamic faith and Yawei language, a Malay dialect, mark them as distinct from the Thai-speaking Buddhists who form the majority community in Thailand.

By the 1970s Malay-Muslim rebel movements committed to waging a separatist struggle against the state of Thailand had gained in strength and are now waging a classic guerilla-style war that can only be won with compassion and grace - something Thaksin's critics say he has not shown in abundance.

The resulting anger and suspicion has soured the once cordial relationship between the two neighboring countries, and analysts predict it will only get worse before it gets better, if at all.

(Inter Press Service)