Source: Human Rights Watch
Thousands of Kachin at Risk From Conflict, Abuses, Aid Shortages
(New York) – China should stop its forced returns of thousands of ethnic Kachin refugees to northern Burma, where they are at risk from armed hostilities, Burmese army abuses, and lack of aid.
During the week of August 19, 2012, Chinese authorities forcibly
returned at least 1,000 Kachin refugees to Burma. Human Rights Watch has
learned that China plans to deport another 4,000 refugees imminently.
Most of the returnees will find it too dangerous to return to their home
villages, leaving them displaced amid an armed conflict in Burma.
“China is flouting its international legal obligations by forcibly
returning Kachin refugees to an active conflict zone rife with Burmese
army abuses,” said Bill Frelick,
Refugee Program director. “China should urgently change course and
provide temporary protection for the refugees in Yunnan Province.”
The Kachin refugees repatriated the week of August 19 were not allowed
to remain in the more than a dozen makeshift camps in China in which
they had lived since June 2011. In July 2012, authorities in Yunnan
Province, along Burma’s northern border, visited Kachin refugees and
informed them they were no longer welcome in China and had to return to
Burma.
A local Kachin aid worker who has communicated directly with the Yunnan
authorities told Human Rights Watch, “I went to the camps when the
[Chinese] authorities came to give a speech to talk about this to the
refugees. They said, ‘We cannot accept you living here. We allowed you
to stay here for over one year but it is no longer possible for you to
stay here. You must go back.’”
While the Chinese government has provided sanctuary to an estimated
7,000 to 10,000 Kachin who fled conflict-related abuses in Burma and
sought safety in Yunnan Province, the authorities have failed to provide
them temporary protection or aid. The Chinese government has denied
United Nations and international humanitarian agencies much-needed
access to these refugees. Those returned to Burma will be relegated to
living in camps for internally displaced people that lack adequate aid
and are currently isolated from UN agencies because the Burmese
government has blocked humanitarian access to the area.
Numerous refugees in Yunnan have told Human Rights Watch about their
fear of forced return by the Chinese authorities. In August 2011, a
25-year-old Kachin from Zinlum said: “I don’t feel secure here at all
because we are still on the border and too close to the Burma side. I
worry as the fighting continues, if the Chinese don’t accept us, where
will we go? Where can we live? We don’t know answers to these questions
and it makes me worry.”
A 36-year-old woman who fled to Yunnan on June 15 said, “We think the
China side is safer than the Burma side, and that is why we moved here.”
A 29-year-old carpenter from Zinlum added: “We all want to go back to
the village. I can’t tell what will happen and when we will be able to
go back. If we could return now, we would, but it’s unsafe.”
The opposition Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) worked with the
Chinese authorities to facilitate the returns. Hundreds were transported
on buses on August 22 to a makeshift camp a few miles outside
Maijayang, in a KIO-controlled area of Kachin State, while the refugees’
belongings were carried on trucks. Hundreds of other refugees were
transported to Burmese-government-controlled areas outside Namkham,
Kachin aid workers told Human Rights Watch. The KIO communicated to the
refugees an option to return to either KIO- or Burmese-government
territory, warning that the KIO could not ensure protection if the
refugees decided to return to government-controlled territory. Neither
the KIO nor the Chinese authorities gave the refugees the option to stay
in China.
The KIO is setting up new camps in territory under its control in
Kachin State, but the camps are still inadequate. In at least one case
new arrivals are being housed in an abandoned building formerly used by a
logging company. The forced returns come during the height of the rainy
season, complicating transportation and humanitarian aid delivery.
In June, Human Rights Watch released a 68-page report, “Isolated in Yunnan: Kachin Refugees from Burma in China’s Yunnan Province,”
estimating that 7,000 to 10,000 Kachin refugees and asylum seekers were
in squalid, improvised camps in Yunnan that were largely isolated from
international humanitarian aid due to restrictions imposed by the
Chinese authorities. Most of the refugees had fled wartime abuses in Burma such as forced labor, killings, rape, and torture by the Burmese army, or the threat of abuses.
There are over 85 camps of internally displaced people in Kachin State,
housing an estimated 75,000 people, who lack adequate humanitarian aid.
Approximately 16 of the camps, in KIO-controlled areas, are already
home to at least 55,000 Kachin, and there are food shortages at some of
those sites.
All camps in KIO territory are inaccessible to UN agencies because of restrictions
imposed by President Thein Sein’s office under the pretense of security
concerns. Local Kachin-led organizations have attempted to fill the
gap, providing food, clothing, shelter, and medicine despite limited
resources. Assistance from UN agencies and other humanitarian
organizations is provided regularly to displaced Kachin in 70 locations
in government-controlled areas, but that too remains inadequate due to
limited resources and the blockage of assistance.
“Adding thousands more Kachin to the camps in Burma will only compound
the crisis for internally displaced people in Kachin State,” Frelick
said. “President Thein Sein urgently needs to let the aid agencies reach
everyone who needs their help.”
Background
In June 2011, hostilities broke out in northern Burma between the
Burmese army and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) near a Chinese-led
hydropower dam in Kachin State. The fighting ended a 17-year ceasefire
agreement between Burma and the Kachin Independence Organization and led
to the displacement of over 75,000 Kachin. The Burmese army forcibly
displaced thousands of civilians who fled to KIO- or
government-controlled territory in Burma and into China. Human Rights
Watch documented
how since June 2011 the Burmese army has attacked Kachin villages,
razed homes, and pillaged properties. Burmese soldiers have threatened
and tortured civilians during interrogations, raped Kachin women, used
antipersonnel mines, and conscripted forced laborers on the front lines,
including children as young as 14.
Displaced Kachin have received inadequate protection in both Burma and
China. In the last year Human Rights Watch documented several cases of
refoulement (forced return) by the Chinese authorities, including two
instances in which the Chinese authorities ordered an estimated 300
Kachin refugees to return to Burma. In some cases since the war began,
the Chinese authorities have also rejected Kachin asylum seekers at the
border, forcing their return to the conflict zone.
Human Rights Watch uses the term “refugee” for Kachin who have entered
China since June 2011 because all have fled armed conflict and rights
abuses in Kachin State and would face serious threats to their lives if
returned to Kachin State. China is a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention
and its 1967 Protocol as well as other international human rights
treaties that prohibit the forced return “in any manner whatsoever” of
refugees to places where their “life or freedom” would be threatened on
account of their “race, religion, nationality, membership of a
particular social or political opinion.” Nonrefoulement is the
cornerstone of refugee protection and is foundational to China’s legal
obligations toward refugees.