UN Expert Visits Refugee Camps
The special rapporteur on human rights travels to Burma to investigate camps for the displaced in Rakhine and Kachin states.
A U.N. human rights envoy on Monday visited refugee camps in
Burma’s restive Rakhine state, where nearly 200 people were killed in
communal violence last year, as part of a fact-finding mission on ethnic
conflict in the country.
Tomas Ojea Quintana, who is on his
seventh trip to Burma as the U.N. Special Rapporteur monitoring the
rights situation in Burma, spent time speaking with refugees at camps in
Myay Pone township near the state capital Sittwe.
He was accompanied by U.N. Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Burma Ashok Nigam.
Thousands
remain homeless in the region following clashes between ethnic Buddhist
Rakhines and Rohingya communities in June and October last year which
left 180 people dead. Refugees are now living in makeshift camps, many
of which lack access to adequate health care, clean water, and basic
provisions.
Quintana and Nigam held talks with Rakhine State
Chief Minister Maung Tin early on Monday before meeting with several
families in camps occupied by both Rakhine and Rohingya refugees.
Aung
Win, a member of parliament from Myay Pone township, said Quintana
interviewed the refugees about their situation in the camps and whether
they felt that the two ethnic groups could live together peacefully as
they had done before last year’s violence.
“He questioned three
to four refugee families about whether they believed refugees from both
sides could coexist peacefully if the government arranged for them to
live together in the same area,” the Rakhine lawmaker told RFA’s Burmese
Service.
“We ethnic Rakhines replied, ‘We don’t want to live
together with [the Rohingyas]. If we lived together in the same area, we
would constantly worry about the possibility of another conflict’,” he
said.
“We don’t think they want to live together either.”
Quintana and Nigam later traveled to Pauktaw township to meet with additional refugees there.
They
also planned to meet with Tun Aung, a former U.N. staffer who was
imprisoned in Sittwe for his alleged involvement in the ethnic conflict
last year.
Fact-finding mission
Quintana’s six-day
trip to Burma is his first visit since August last year, when he
highlighted June violence in Rakhine state and called on the Burmese
government to review its 1982 Citizenship Law, which limits citizenship
to those who can prove their ancestors lived in the country.
The
law bars citizenship rights to many of Burma’s 800,000 Rohingyas, who
have been long viewed by the authorities and by many Burmese as illegal
immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh even though many have lived in
the country for generations.
The U.N. considers the Rohingyas to be one of the world’s most persecuted minorities.
Ahead
of a landmark visit by U.S. President to Burma at the end of last year,
Burmese President Thein Sein assured the international community that
his government will consider resolving contentious rights issues facing
the Rohingya, including the possibility of providing them citizenship.
During
his visit, Quintana will also gather data on the conflicts in northern
Burma’s Kachin state, where tens of thousands of people have fled
fighting between the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and the Burmese
military since June 2011 when a 17-year cease-fire agreement was
shattered.
Last week, after more than a month of particularly
fierce fighting, officials from the Burmese government and the KIA met
for talks brokered by Beijing and agreed to hold another round of talks
by the third week of February with the aim of reaching a "strong
cease-fire."
Shortly after last week’s talks, the U.N.’s special
adviser on Burma Vijay Nambiar visited refugee camps in Kachin state
that had previously been closed to international aid groups, pledging to
work with the Burmese government to deliver aid to those displaced by
the recent clashes.
In addition to investigating Burma’s ongoing
ethnic conflicts, Quintana will meet with government officials to
discuss the release of the country’s remaining political prisoners,
estimated to number in the hundreds.
Burma announced last week
that it would establish a presidential steering committee to “grant
liberty” to those imprisoned for voicing political dissent, in the
government’s first public acknowledgement that it is holding political
prisoners in the country’s jails.
Quintana is expected to meet
with members of parliament, the judiciary, the Myanmar National Human
Rights Commission and civil society organizations in Naypyitaw and
Rangoon.
The special rapporteur will present his report on the
human rights situation in Burma to the 22nd session of the Human Rights
Council on March 11.
Reported by Min Thein Aung for RFA’s Burmese Service. Translated by Khet Mar. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
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