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Top UNHCR official finds "progress overall" on visit to Thailand, Laos

News Stories, 3 May 2007

© UNHCR/S.Siritheerajesd
UNHCR's Assistant High Commissioner for Protection Erika Feller (right) during her visit Tham Hin camp.

BANGKOK, Thailand, May 3 (UNHCR) A top UNHCR official on Thursday applauded Thailand's recent issuance of identity cards to 85,000 refugees in government-run camps and called on the authorities to allow them further opportunities to farm and work outside the camps.

Erika Feller, the UN refugee agency's Assistant High Commissioner for Protection, also reported some progress on resolving the stalemate over 155 Lao Hmong who have been in detention on the Thai side of the border with Laos since being rounded up for deportation last November.

Speaking to journalists in Bangkok at the end of an eight-day visit to Thailand and Laos, Feller summed up her trip as "positive overall, progress overall, and the future looks a lot better for a lot of people."

During her stay, Feller visited Tham Hin refugee camp, home to about 7,300 of the 140,000 Myanmar refugees in Thailand. She said the atmosphere had improved considerably since she was last in the camp two years ago mainly because refugees have begun to depart for resettlement in the United States.

Resettlement has given people hope for the future beyond the camp, she told a press conference at The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand.

Some 8,700 refugees have departed from Thailand for third countries since 2004, after 15 years when no one had been allowed to leave. A further 10,000 should be resettled this year. "Resettlement availability is an exceedingly valuable and important development," Feller said.

At the same time, she said, the Thai government has begun to allow skills training and more education in all nine camps along the Thai-Myanmar border.

An important step was the recent issuance of Thai government identity cards to 85,000 refugees. Identity cards are not only an important protection tool, Feller said, but gave refugees "confidence to look at self-sufficiency options inside and outside the camp."

Unfortunately, she said, after the visit of High Commissioner António Guterres last year, Thailand had not done as much as had been expected to increase opportunities for refugees to work outside the camps.

She added that the UN refugee agency, as a general principle, does not favour closed camps such as those run by the Thai government because they make refugees dependent on hand-outs. "We advocate self-sufficiency possibilities," she said.

Feller, who went to Vientiane in Laos for one day of talks with Lao officials, also reported cautious optimism on the issue of the 155 Lao Hmong recognized refugees being held in the Nong Khai Immigration Detention Centre in Thailand.

She said she understood the concerns of both governments: not to reward people smuggling and not to encourage migrants to leave Laos in hopes of being resettled to third countries from Thailand.

Feller said Thailand and Laos would meet within the coming weeks to implement a border agreement and she said she had received assurances the two countries "will look carefully at the concerns of UNHCR in the context of the best solution. All in all, my summary of the discussions would be positive and hopeful."

In fact, Feller said, Laos was more open to discussing the issue than she had anticipated. "I believe and I hope I am not wrong for the 155, the humanitarian aspects are to the fore."

By Kitty McKinsey in Bangkok, Thailand

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UNHCR country pages

Refugees from Myanmar: Ethnic Karens Seek Shelter

Over 2,000 refugees from Myanmar have crossed the border into Thailand in recent months. Most claim to be fleeing renewed conflict and human rights abuses in Kayin state, Myanmar. The mainly ethnic Karen refugees say their houses and villages have been burned and civilians killed. Many were weak upon arrival, suffering from illnesses such as malaria, after a long, dangerous journey to the camps through heavily mined areas. The refugees have been arriving at government-run camps, mainly in the Mae Hong Son area in northern Thailand.

UNHCR is working with the Thai government and non-governmental organisations to ensure the new arrivals are admitted to the camps and provided with adequate shelter and protection. Shelter has been a major issue as the capacity in many refugee camps has been overwhelmed. In a breakthrough in mid-May, Thai authorities agreed to build proper houses for the new arrivals.

There are currently 140,000 refugees from Myanmar living in nine border camps in Thailand, many of them have been there for up to 20 years.

Refugees from Myanmar: Ethnic Karens Seek Shelter

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During one six-day period at the end of March, more than 1,100 Somalis and Ethiopians arrived on the shores of Yemen after crossing the Gulf of Aden on smuggler's boats from Bosaso, Somalia. At least 28 people died during these recent voyages – from asphyxiation, beating or drowning – and many were badly injured by the smugglers. Others suffered skin problems as a result of prolonged contact with sea water, human waste, diesel oil and other chemicals.

During a recent visit to Yemen, UNHCR Assistant High Commissioner for Protection Erika Feller pledged to further raise the profile of the situation, to appeal for additional funding and international action to help Yemen, and to develop projects that will improve the living conditions and self sufficiency of the refugees in Yemen.

Since January 2006, Yemen has received nearly 30,000 people from Somalia, Ethiopia and other places, while more than 500 people have died during the sea crossing and at least 300 remain missing. UNHCR provides assistance, care and housing to more than 100,000 refugees already in Yemen.

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