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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU!3ZLUFUR
- Organization: Central Michigan University
- Message-ID: <930125.171840.EST.3ZLUFUR@CMUVM>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.seasia-l
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 17:18:40 EST
- Sender: Southeast Asia Discussion List <SEASIA-L@MSU.BITNET>
- From: Elliott Parker <3ZLUFUR@CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU>
- Subject: TH;MM: Burmese face red tape
- Lines: 54
-
- ======================= Forwarded Message ===========================
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 93 23:01:34+0700
- From: Kamol Hengkietisak <kamol@ipied.tu.ac.th>
- Subject: Bangkok Post Jan 26: Burmese students, monks face red tape
-
-
- A LARGE number of Burmese Buddhist monks and students who have
- been accepted for resettlement in third countries are still
- stranded in Thailand because the Interior Ministry has refused to
- issue them security clearances.
-
- Officials working with displaced persons said yesterday that the
- stranded Burmese include several cases already cleared by the US
- State Department and who have sponsors ready to accept them.
-
- Officials from the US State Department met their Thai counterparts
- at the Interior Ministry to solve the problem, but to date there
- has been no progress, the officials said.
-
- A total of 250 Burmese were accepted for resettlement in the US
- last year.
-
- But by the end of the year, only 55 were actually resettled and 79
- more cases cleared.
-
- The officials said that other third countries which had shown
- readiness to accept Burmese refugees for resettlement are also
- facing the same problem from the ministry.
-
- The ministry has stopped issuing security clearances to Burmese
- refugees since November, which coincided with the expiry of a
- deadline for 520 Burmese students to be interned in a camp in Pak
- Tho District of Ratchaburi Province or face arrest.
-
- Some of the refugees who have been accepted for resettlement in
- third countries but are still stranded have voiced scepticism
- towards a recent remark by Interior Minister Chavalit Yongchaiyudh
- that arrested students can choose to be2remanded in the camp or at
- the immigration detention centre until they are sent to third
- countries.
-
- "When Thailand does not want us, it should let us leave the
- country," one refugee said, apparently, reflecting the mood of his
- colleagues.
-
- Several international NGOs which have been assisting Burmese
- students are considering submitting an appeal to His Majesty the
- King for his intervention to help the stranded refugees leave the
- country.
-
- Several Burmese students who refuse to be interned are now
- suffering because their financial and medical assistance from the
- United Nations has been suspended at the request of the Thai
- Government, said a Burmese refugee source.
-