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2,000 refugees from Myanmar flee to Thailand after renewed conflict

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2,000 refugees from Myanmar flee to Thailand after renewed conflict

Over the last three months some 2,000 refugees from Myanmar have arrived in Thailand saying they are fleeing renewed conflict and human rights abuses in Kayin state in Myanmar. Some 400 crossed the border last week and more are expected.
24 May 2006 Also available in:
Refugees from Myanmar arriving in the Mae Hong Son area of northern Thailand have been staying in plastic makeshift shelters which can't cope with the rain. The Thai government says it is going to build proper houses for them.

BANGKOK, May 24 (UNHCR) - Over the last three months some 2,000 refugees from Myanmar have arrived in northern Thailand saying they are fleeing renewed conflict and human rights abuses in Kayin state in Myanmar. Some 400 crossed the border last week to find refuge in government-run camps in the Mae Hong Son area, and more are expected.

"The predominantly ethnic Karen refugees say their houses and villages have been burned and civilians killed. Many are very weak and suffering from illnesses such as malaria after a long, dangerous journey to the camps through heavily land-mined areas," UNHCR spokeswoman Jennifer Pagonis told reporters in Geneva on Tuesday. "Some also report that they had difficulties crossing the Thai border due to strengthened border controls," she added.

UNHCR is expecting more refugees to seek safety in Thailand in the coming weeks. Many of the refugees passed through the "Eh Htu Hta" camp for internally displaced people, IDPs, just on the other side of the border in Myanmar where they say that hundreds more displaced Karen villagers are living in desperate conditions.

"The IDPs are reportedly waiting to see whether conditions in their homes areas improve so that they can return home, otherwise they may try to cross the border into Thailand if the situation deteriorates," Pagonis said.

UNHCR is working with the Thai government and non-governmental organisations to ensure that the new arrivals are admitted to the camps and are provided with adequate shelter and protection.

"Shelter has been a major concern as the capacity in some refugee camps has been overwhelmed. In some camps, refugees have been forced to live in makeshift shelters made of plastic sheeting which can't cope with the heavy rains," Pagonis said.

In a breakthrough last week, the Thai authorities agreed that proper houses will be built to accommodate the new arrivals.

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