KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

Similar documents
KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE NEWSLETTER MONTHLY REPORT AUGUST, 2008

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE NEWSLETTER & MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE NEWSLETTER MONTHLY REPORT SEPTEMBER, 2010

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE NEWSLETTER MONTHLY REPORT OCTOBER, 2010

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE NEWSLETTER MONTHLY REPORT AUGUST, 2010

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE NEWSLETTER MONTHLY REPORT APRIL, 2010

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE NEWSLETTER MONTHLY REPORT MAY, 2010

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT DECEMBER, 2003

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. The Karen Refugee Committee, NEWSLETTER & MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. The Karen Refugee Committee, NEWSLETTER & MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. The Karen Refugee Committee, NEWSLETTER & MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE NEWSLETTER MONTHLY REPORT JUNE, 2010

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. The Karen Refugee Committee, NEWSLETTER & MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. The Karen Refugee Committee, NEWSLETTER & MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. The Karen Refugee Committee, NEWSLETTER & MONTHLY REPORT

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT MARCH 1998

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT AUGUST 1997

THAILAND Handicap International Federal Information Thailand Country Card EN. Elise Cartuyvels

Withyou. Annual Report 2011: Our Past Year s Achievements. UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Bangkok Office newsletter, 2012 Volume 4

(revised 1 st Nov 2007)

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE. The Karen Refugee Committee, NEWSLETTER & MONTHLY REPORT

THAILAND: Strengthening Protection Capacity Project Matrix

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE APRIL 1993

Report on the problem and follow up to the 2013 fire in Karenni Refugee Camp 2

Thailand. Main objectives. Impact

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE APRIL 1990

Annual Report 2013 ช ำระค าฝากส งเป นรายเด อน ใบอน ญาตพ เศษท 55/2555 ศฟ. บด นทรเดชา 10312

LIVING IN LIMBO: Burma s youth in Thailand see few opportunities to use education and vocational skills

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE

STRENGTHENING PROTECTION CAPACITY PROJECT LIVELIHOODS COMPONENT. Phase Two CONSOLIDATED LIVELIHOODS PROGRAMME

Final Report. Resettlement Program. Output 2C: Sustainable Solutions to the Displaced People Situation along the Thai-Myanmar Border.

WARM UP: Today s Topics What were the major turning points. in WW2? How did the Allies compromise with one another?

The Organization of Mon Relief and Development Committee

14. The Situation of Refugees

Learning with the Irrawaddy 2 To accompany May 2005 Issue of Irrawaddy Magazine Selected article: Top of their Class, page 28

Thailand Burma Border Consortium Strategic Plan (Reviewed & revised, Jan 2012)

ANNUAL REPORT Working Towards Inclusive Education

Introduction to World War II By USHistory.org 2017

Learning with The Irrawaddy, No. 39 To accompany the October 2009 issue of The Irrawaddy magazine.

Hey there I m (name) and today I want to show you how things were going just after World War Two.

Human Rights and Human Security in Southeast Asia

Results of World War II Crossword

The Rise of the Japanese Empire. World History

Cultural Orientation Resource Center, Center for Applied Linguistics Overseas CO Program Highlight. Refugees from Burma, served by IRC RSC East Asia

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE

FIRST OFF, JUST A QUICK NOTE FROM US: YOU ARE AWESOME!

ToR for Mid-term Evaluation

DKBA soldiers burn down huts, detain villagers and loot property in Thailand

WW II Homework Packet #3 Honors (Ch ) Life under a dictator or totalitarian can be difficult. Describe life under this form of government

Rapporteur: Please collect any available data on incidence/prevalence, including MDR-TB for later compilation.

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT

Natural Disaster Data Book 2016 An Analytical Overview

The Atomic Bomb. Document # In your own words, what is the argument? (Summarize the document)

DIRECTIONS: CLICK ON THE LINKS BELOW TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS. Website 1:

From D-Day to Doomsday Part A - Foreign

Life in Exile: Burmese Refugees along the Thai-Burma Border

Learning with The Irrawaddy, No. 50 To accompany the December 2010 issue of The Irrawaddy magazine.

Remarks. H.E. Retno L.P. Marsudi Minister for Foreign Affairs Republic of Indonesia. On the occasion of the 51 st ASEAN DAY

Chapter 3: Regional Characteristics of Natural Disasters

Unit 7.4: World War II

East Asia and the Pacific

FUNDING BUDGET FUNDING AND BUDGET

S.C. Voices Holocaust Series

The Centre for Public Opinion and Democracy

Victim Assistance in Burma (Myanmar) 1 : then and now

Name: Class: Date: Contemporary Global Issues: Reading Essentials and Study Guide: Lesson 2

GCSE 4231/02 GEOGRAPHY. (Specification A) HIGHER TIER UNIT 1 Core Geography. A.M. MONDAY, 13 June hours. Candidate Name.

Unmixing Migration to fill Gaps in Protection and bring Order to Mixed Migration Flows

PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS

P r e s e n t a t i o n. Knowledge Zone Vocational Training Centre (KZVTC) Myawaddy, Myanmar Further education for students with leadership abilities

January UPDATE January developments Recycling in Sarafand Support provided to Lebanese Public Institutions in 2015

W.W.II Part 2. Chapter 25

BURMA S REFUGEES: REPATRIATION FOR WHOM? By Roland Watson Dictator Watch November 12, Please share.

The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS E DUC ATIO N A L R ESO UR CE FO R TEACHERS AN D FACILITATO RS

National Statement by Ireland: General Conference of the IAEA: 14 to 18 September 2015

Forced voting as military regime ploughs forth with referendum despite cyclone devastation

Minimum educational standards for education in emergencies

CIVILIAN TREATMENT AND THE WAR ON TERRORISM 2

Transcription:

KAREN REFUGEE COMMITTEE MONTHLY REPORT AUGUST, 2006

Karen Refugee Committee Monthly Report August, 2006 Newsletter On August 6 th and 9 th, 1945, the World witnessed the awesome, destructive Power, that Man had come to possess, when (2) Atomic Bombs were dropped on the Japanese Cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Japan was shocked into defeat and WW-II ended on August 15 th 1945. The war brought 20 th century cruelty to its Peak. The Nazi Regime systematically killed an estimated (6) million Jews including some (3) million who died in Death Camps. Gypsies Slavs, Political opponents, sick, retarded people, undesirables were also murdered by the Nazis. Overall, some (45) million People lost their lives in the War. The end of the War was supposed to usher in Global Peace. But on the contrary, we can see the World more in a dangerous situation, what with the possession and Proliferation of more powerful weapons of Mass Destruction. Then, more countries are attempting to possess more destructive weaponry, and means of delivery claiming Self Protection for their attempts. One sure result would be that National Leaders will be forced to make Respect Visits to National Shrines, if only to show that they are willing and ready to take the responsibility to protect their own People. There can be no argument that For every action, there can only be an equal and opposite reaction. In Burma, this month of August, events will surely make People Remember, the (4) Eights Movement of August 1988 (8.8.88). In 1962 on July 7 th, 8 th, the Incoming Military Regime of General Ne Win committed the unforgivable deed of gunning down dissenting Students and then completely demolishing their Students Union H / Q Building in Rangoon. This earned for him only the enmity of the students as a whole. By August of 1988, the same subdued dissent flared up, with the same set-up. But this time, the shooting was not only at students. Teachers, Service workers and Monks as well died. Unto this day, no one can say how many have perished in the aftermath of the remarks by General Ne Win, that when soldiers shoot, they shoot straight. The air of dissent, animosity and enmity persist unto this day. Looking around the world, this August, we see North Korea putting off the Celebration to mark their Liberation from Japanese Rule through 1910 to 1945 August. Surprisingly it was put off because of the Severe Storm Floods that hit the country in the 1 st week of August, and which resulted in over (10,000) people dead or missing.

Then with this August, we remember the Abortive Coup against Mikhail Gorbachev, in August of 1991 and which led to moves in the Soviet Unions Baltic Republics, of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania for Independence, and which finally led to the break-up of the Soviet Union into (15) separate Republics. Then in this August, we hear of Quakes and Volcanic Eruptions in many places, including, Indonesia, the Philippines, the Pacific Islands and which reminded us of the biggest blow of them all, the August 26-28 Krakatao Volcano Blow-up which left the (2640 ft) peak collapsing to (1000 ft) below sea-level and left (31,000) people dead. The Tsunami generated by the explosion supposedly reached the shores of England, and ash from the Eruption colored sunsets around the world for (2) years. In the United States, this August is the KATRINA Anniversary. Its awareness that people can be hit hard by Natural Forces, any Place any Time. On the part of Human folly, this month, we again see the flare-up of the simmering dissent, coming to surface in the Israeli-Palestine-Hezbollah fighting. Most alarming is that it may encompass wider implications, and which can only be catastrophic. Luckily, Cooler Heads prevail and there is now some sort of respite, which however has every potential to flare up again. This month, we are hearing of warnings, from People in the position to know, that the worlds Peoples will be faced with calamities as a result of scarcity of Water and the depletion of forests. This can only be due to the erring, irresponsible way of Earth s Inhabitants. One very good example would be that of what had happened at Pagan, the Imperial City Naypyidaw established by the Burmese King Anawrahta. The Region of Pagan was a vast splendid Rain Forest of Legend where Big Animals, Birds, Cats and elephants thrive. With the Glory of Pagan Expanding far and wide, every one who s who in Pagan, from the King downwards, felt like erecting Pagodas for Self Glorification. Now, Pagodas need bricks, which are clay baked by wood fire. A Pagoda will need millions of Bricks baked with Firewood. At one time Pagan Boasts a record of Pagodas numbering Hleh Win Yo Than Ta Nyan Nyan which meant screeching noisy cart axles, Pagan Pagodas representing (4446733) in number. Glory or not, what was lost was, magnificent Tropical Trees Vanishing by the Millions and the region around Pagoda reduced to almost a desert. It will be good if the people at Naypyidaw Pyinmana learn from the past. However, word is going around that there is already a plan to build a Pagoda at Pyinmana, a Replica of the Rangoon Shwedagon. History tends to repeat itself.

K.R.C Camps Activities Report. August 2006 03/08/2006 CMP- Quarterly meeting at K.R.C Head office. Participation KRC- Executive Committee, TBBC Camp Committee and CMP workers. There was review on past efforts, on successes, failures, weakness. Then, ways for improvement needs and efforts discussed. The Camps Management Programme (C.M.P) is on going with added Commitment and effort. It is helping with improvement, in Camps Administration, works processes and still issues are coming out. There is still difficulty in the statistics, supply distribute sectors, mainly because of the instability in population. There are people going away for resettlement. There are irresponsibility, and now transparencies, which still need to be address. But overall, C.M.P can been seen now as helping greatly with improvements. 14 to 18/08/2006 Annual Meeting between K.R.C including Branch Offices, camps Committees, Karen Work Groups (K.W.O, K.Y.O, K.S.N.G, etc). Discussed were works Activities through out the past year, the positive, Negative outcomes, the need to mend, to change, to improve. There were also talks at rooting out problematic matters, problems that need to be focused and addressed. There was also the need to help with Resettlement, for those to be Resettled, to have awareness, to be prepared and be worthy of support help. One day of the meeting was set aside for participation by UNHCR support NGOs, where there were presentations by individual Groups and also questions and Answer sessions where Questions relating to wide ranging Camps affair were asked and answered. There was also a great deal of information sharing together with Guidance, council and needed efforts, to make Refugee Care a Success. The road ahead was still found to be not an easy one, infact, Camps affairs can be more complicated, with many leaving, many going away, many undecided and many more still ignorant and innocent. 29/08/2006 One Camp Activity of Note. Tham Hin Camp. There was the visit by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Mr. Antonio Guterres and Mrs. Ellen Sauerbrey, the United States Assistant Secretary for population, Migration. There was the Assembled meeting with the Refugees and Camp Elders. Information was that there was the opening, where Refugees would be resettled in the United States and where there would be support with living, Medical, health, Education, and Job Placement. 63 Refugees from Tham Hin Camp are reported to have been sent on that day, to be resettled in the United States.

29/08/2006 M.S.F Representatives visit K.R.C. Discussed finding ways to help/support Displaced People along the Border especially with regard to Medical and Health matters 31/08/2006 K.R.C members, staff workers meeting. Discuss Activation in all (7) Camps for promotion, betterment of Administration, works Activities, Reporting, Communication, and improvement of social relations and the keeping of Law and Order. It s a tall order, which will be quite difficult to succeed. But still, there is no room for complacency as matters are at the moment; filled with features of social disruptions, misdemeanors, abuses and exploitations. Mae La Camp 9 to 11/08/2006 Elections in Mae La Camp. For New Camp s Administrations Committee. For the New term 2006-2008 15 members are Elected 5 of them women. 12/08/2006 Mae La Camp- All school children participating in Fellowship Activities, including reciting poems, writing Essays, Pictures Drawing and singing competitions. These activities are for honoring the Queen of Thailand on her 74 th Birthday 16 to 19/08/2006 HIV and VCT Work Groups. Information sharing discussion in Mae La Camp, especially with regard to HIV/AIDS and Blood Donation. 23/08/2006 I.C.S. Director visit Mae La Camp. Meeting with school Heads, School Committees and Teachers in Zone B and C. During this month, the Camp Authorities ordered culling of birds and chicken in the whole of Mae La, in an attempt to prevent Bird Flu in the Camp. Umphiem Camp 03/08/2006 (10) Visitors from the Netherlands together with ZOA personnel visit Umphiem Camp. Meet with the Education and Vocational training Committees for the purpose of improvement and further support for these activities. Camp Committee Report- mention of breakage in rice sacks sent in being more than normal, resulting in decrease in total amount for distribution. Charcoal Support sent in include much in powder form and which are being sent back to the Supplier. The Supplier provide with the short supply.

MAE SOT AREA NORTH SOUTH NUMBER OF PEOPLE IN THE CAMPS AUGUST, 2006. No. of Over - 12 Yrs 6-12 Yrs Under 5 Yrs CAMP families M F M F M F Total Mae La 10,272 17,711 16,887 4,934 4,459 3,595 3,567 51,153 Um Pheim Mai 3,603 7,196 6,896 1,912 1,743 1,378 1,322 20,447 Total 13,875 24,907 23,783 6,846 6,202 4,973 4,889 71,600 Mae Ra Moe 2,562 5,189 4,751 1,610 1,526 1,055 1,094 15,225 Mae La Oo 2,720 5,526 5,045 1,705 1,532 1,116 1,089 16,013 Total 5,282 10,715 9,796 3,315 3,058 2,171 2,183 31,238 Noh Poe 3,720 4,867 4,558 1,293 1,227 1,006 1,005 13,956 Ban Dong Yang 934 1,470 1,568 394 383 316 286 4,417 Htam Him 1,823 3,091 3,154 1,045 1,049 759 677 9,775 Total 6,477 9,428 9,280 2,732 2,659 2,081 1,968 28,148 Grand Total 25,634 45,050 42,859 12,893 11,919 9,225 9,040 130,986 We shall always be grateful to the Thai people and Government for their sympathy and understanding in allowing us safe refuge. We are also indebted to the NGOs for their Supports and Services. TBBC Support in Food and Shelter Material. TBBC is also supporting with warm clothing for all the camps. MSF Support in Medical and Health facilities. AMI Support in Medical and Health facilities. ARC Support in Medical and Health facilities. M. I (Malteser International) formerly MHD Support in Medical and Health facilities. ZOA (ABW aid) Support in Educational facilities Teachers' Training. World Education / Consortium Support in World Educational facilities, Teachers' Training and Education for Deaf / Mute / Blinds. TOPS Support in Educational facilities. ICS Asia Support in Educational facilities and school buildings. COERR Rice and Educational support. EVI To be involved with Extremely Vulnerable people. H.I Support for Refugee Handicaps with Prosthesis and rehabilitation and also year end sporting events for Handicaps. NCA (Norway Church Aid) has been providing KRC with administrative & organizational Support. It has also supported with remuneration for KRC members and workers. UNHCR For Registration Process Protection and Ultimate Safe Repatriation. SMRU Support with Malaria Control, Prevention and Treatment. SVA To support with Libraries in the camps. PPAT Parenthood Planning Association Thailand Supporting with Family Planning and Preventive/ Education in Refugee Camps. Address: P.O Box- 5, Mae Sot, Tak-63110, Thailand. Ø: (055) Intl: +66 55 532 947. E- Mail: krc.academic@gmail.com. Fax :( 055) Intl +66 55 546 869 Mobile: +66 78 498 250