Representatives from refugee support agencies and international
nongovernmental organizations are engaged in meetings with Burmese
officials in Naypyidaw to discuss plans for the resettlement of
internally displaced persons (IDPs) and war refugees in eastern Burma.
Included in the talks are the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), and Burma’s Minister
for Border Affairs. Several meetings have been held in recent weeks, but
no group has been willing to disclose detail of the negotiations.
On April 25, Johannes Gerhard Ten Feld, the resident representative
of the UNHCR, met with Burmese Minister for Border Affairs Lt-Gen Thein
Htay in the capital to discuss ways to enhance cooperation between both
parties in matters relating to the delivery of humanitarian assistance
and the resettlement of displaced families, according to The New Light of Myanmar.
On May 15, the same newspaper reported that the Bangkok-based UNHCR
office’s Southeast Asian Coordinator, James Lynch, had met with Lt-Gen
Thein Htay and Deputy Minister for Border Affairs Maj-Gen Zaw Win in
Naypyidaw where they “spoke frankly” about those same issues.
The level of talks is seen by many Burmese observers as a preparatory
step for the repatriation of Burmese war refugees and the closure of
nine refugee camps on the Thai-Burmese border. There are more than 1
million IDPs in eastern Burma and 150,000 Burmese refugees at camps
along the border.
NGOs working at the Thai-Burmese border have been quick to surmise
that both the Thai and Burmese governments are engaging with
international organizations because they are paving the way for the
repatriation of the refugees.
NGO sources said that three camps are being built in Myawaddy
District in southern Karen State to house repatriated Burmese from two
refugee camps in Thailand’s Tak Province, most likely Nu Po and Umpieng
camps.
According to Thai military sources, a group of eight Burmese
officials from Karenni State held a meeting with Thai authorities from
bordering Mae Hong Son Province on May 17 in the northern Thai town of
Mae Sariang.
The Burmese officials reportedly called on the Thai authorities to
shut down refugee camps in Mae Hong Son and to repatriate Karenni
refugees, as well as long-neck ethnic Padaung people who are currently
housed in temporary camps in Mae Hong Son.
In a recent meeting with the rebel Karenni National Progressive Party
(KNPP) in Mae Hong Son, the leading Burmese government peace
negotiator, Aung Min, stated that Naypyidaw wants to begin the
resettlement of Karenni refugees by the rainy season this year,
presumably in June.
Recently, local Thai authorities have been informally surveying
refugees from three camps along the Thai-Burmese border about their
opinions and their intentions for the near future, said Sally Thompson,
the deputy director of the Thailand Burma Border Consortium, the main
humanitarian agency providing aid to the 150,000 refugees.
Thai authorities have reportedly been conducting the informal survey
in Mae La camp, the largest refugee center in Tak Province, and two
Karenni refugee camps in Mae Hong Son, northern Thailand, since
mid-March.
“We have to prepare for the return of refugees, but there is still no timeframe for it,” said Thompson.
Some NGO sources said that any possibility of Burmese refugee
repatriation must be conducted voluntarily and not until the peace
process between the government and rebel Karen National Union (KNU) is
guaranteed.
Since peace negotiations have begun, several refugees have returned
to their abandoned villages in Karen State and other parts of eastern
Burma to assess the damage, the safety, and the feasibility of
returning.
And few refugee families in Ban Don Yang camp in Kanchanaburi
Province were reportedly repatriated recently by Thai authorities, but
voluntarily, said the sources.
Naw Dee, a housewife in Mae La Oon refugee camp in Mae Hong Son
Province said that she has recently visited her hometown in Papun
District in northern Karen State to observe the conditions on the
ground.
She said that local villagers in Papun District are now rushing to
buy (or seize) more land and marking their territories as the potential
of a relative economic boom takers root in anticipation of a successful
peace agreement.
Naw Dee, also a landowner in Papun District, said that she and other
landowners now have to pay a local land tax to respective village heads.
Other refugees have been reported visiting their hometowns across
Karen State. While leaving their wives and children at the camps, many
men are returning to begin rebuilding their homes and planting crops.
Meanwhile, Norwegian Initiative, a pilot project which is believed to
have received some US $5 million in funding from the Norwegian
government, is consulting with local communities and conducting
assessments among local villagers in IDP zones, as well as in Kyaukkyi
District in Pegu Division.
Based on the findings of the needs assessments, the Norwegian
Initiative said it will continue to work with ethnic armed groups, the
government, international and national NGOs, and communities to support
projects which provide peace dividends for people living in areas
affected by armed conflict, a source said.
Kitty McKinsey, the regional spokeswoman for the UNHCR in Asia, said,
“We know Myanmar is changing very quickly and we want to be prepared.
But the return [of refugees] has to be voluntary.”
Source: Irrawaddy
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