People will not leave in huge number if they are not prosecuted, physically and militarily. Either by a government, or by rival clans or religious groups that are backed or tolerated by government.
We have to reiterate for the nth time: the main purpose of government, its raison d' etre, is to promulgate the rule of law, the law/s that protect the people's right to life against aggression, right to private property, and right to liberty and expression. If there is government failure in this basic function, expect government failure in many other sectors and functions.
Here are some of the troubling news reports the past two days.
-------------
(1) Interaksyon,
May 12
The International
Organization for Migration called on Southeast Asian governments Tuesday to
find and rescue thousands of migrants who are believed to be stranded at sea
and at risk of death.
Campaigners fear as
many as 8,000 migrants from Bangladesh and Myanmar -- among them many from the
Rohingya minority -- are being held at sea with dwindling supplies after a Thai
crackdown on trafficking curbed smuggling routes.
(2) The
Guardian, May 12
International groups worry that boats will soon
land with dead bodies on board as Rohingyas and Bangladeshis flee poverty and
discrimination.
In the past three
years attacks on the religious minority, numbering about 1.3m, have left up to
280 people dead and forced 140,000 from their homes. They live in crowded camps
just outside the Rakhine state capital, Sittwe, where they have little access
to school or adequate health care....
(3) Yahoo
news, May 11
Nearly 2,000 boat people from Myanmar and Bangladesh have
been rescued or swum to shore in Malaysia and Indonesia, authorities said
Monday, warning that yet more desperate migrants could be in peril at sea.
The spate of arrivals comes as Thailand, a key stop on a
Southeast Asian people-smuggling route, cracks down following the discovery of
mass graves that has laid bare the extent of the thriving trade.
(4) Interaksyon,
May 12
We gave them fuel
and asked them to proceed. We are not forcing them to go to Malaysia nor
Australia. That is not our business. Our business is they don't enter Indonesia
because Indonesia is not the destination."
Another boat
carrying an estimated 600 migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh arrived in the
north of Aceh, the westernmost province of Indonesia, at the weekend.
(5) BBC,
May 11
Nearly 600 people
believed to be Bangladeshis and Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar have been rescued
from boats drifting in Indonesian waters.
At least two
overcrowded boats - with many women and children on board - were towed by local
fishermen to the shores of Aceh province on Sunday.
Myanmar - also
known as Burma - refuses to recognise Rohingya as citizens. Hundreds of
thousands have fled persecution in recent years, often through Thailand but
also by sea.
(6) Yahoo
news, May 10
According to the
migrant, five boats had departed from Myanmar last week to escape the conflict
in their country, Darsa said.
"He said the
Muslims were beaten and had hot water poured on them and they just wanted to
get out of Myanmar as soon as possible, to anywhere where they could seek
refuge," he said.
Buddhist-majority
Myanmar views its population of roughly 800,000 Rohingya as illegal Bangladeshi
immigrants, and they have been targeted in outbreaks of sectarian violence there
in recent years, prompting many to flee.
(7) The
Straits Times, May 11
Thousands of
impoverished Muslim Rohingya – a minority unwanted by Myanmar’s government –
and Bangladeshis have been braving a perilous sea and land trafficking route
through Thailand and into Malaysia, Indonesia and beyond every year.
Malaysian police
said people-smugglers had dumped more than 1,000 hungry migrants in shallow
waters off the coast of the resort island of Langkawi since Sunday. “We think
there were three boats that ferried 1,018 migrants,” said Langkawi deputy
police chief Jamil Ahmed.
(8) The
Straits Times, May 11
Why are they fleeing?
Fierce communal violence between Buddhists and Muslim Rohingya in
Rakhine in 2012, which left some 200 dead and tens of thousands trapped in
squalid camps - mainly Rohingya - catalysed the latest exodus.
The Rohingya have long been treated as "foreigners" by
Myanmar's Buddhist majority.
"How many have left?
The UN refugee agency says well over 120,000 have fled since the 2012
violence, an exodus that is gathering pace.
The agency estimates 25,000 people from Myanmar and Bangladesh have
taken to boats headed south in the first three months of this year alone.
An estimated 53,000 left in 2014, braving the sea crossing to southern
Thailand with many headed for Malaysia and beyond. Hundreds die at sea every
year.
One civil society, non-govt. response from our free marketer friends in Kuala Lumpur. Posted in fb two days ago by Wan Saiful Wan Jan of IDEAS:
We are building a private school for stateless and refugee kids. I am looking for volunteers with expertise in either similar kind of educational environment, or relevant expertise such as legal, HR, fundraising an financial admin to help at Board level. Anyone interested?
2 comments:
1. Haris Alimudin. Please come to Sabah, we are facing massive problem with stateless childs with no basic education, if the problem is unattended, soon we will face massive threat.
2. Wan Saiful Wan Jan. Thank you all for the overwhelming support. The location is in Pudu and you can see the preliminary work that we have done here www.ideasacademy.org.my . We now have 24 students. But we are moving into a new premise that can take up to 300 students so this is an ambitious project.
-------------See also:
Migration and Freedom 19: PH Immigration Bureaucracy, September 08, 2012
Migration 20: Overseas Employment, Positives Outweigh the Negatives?, October 09, 2013
Demography 22: Japan's Depopulation and Migration Policy, May 11, 2014
Migration 23: Why Do Many Filipinos Work Abroad? January 14, 2015
In the light of the persecution of Rohingya Muslims, Are Buddhists people Violent? what are these monks doing in the name of their religion?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LeWEXyR70nU Do share to create awareness!
Hi, I think it's the Myanmar government, not the Buddhist people per se, who is violent against their Muslim citizens. The same way, it's the Muslim government (Shiite or Sunni or other ethnic groups) that is violent to others that do not belong to their ethnic camp, and not Muslims per se. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThe Philippine gov't must prioritize serving all Filipino citizens who don't have additional countries of citizenship, nor additional passport countries.
ReplyDelete