Illegal Aliens or Refugees? 100,000 Burmese Chin Christians in India
(Photo: The Christian Post)
(l-r)
Dan Kosten, chair of Refugee Council USA; Joel Charny, vice president
for humanitarian policy and practice at InterAction; Matthew Wilch, U.S.
human rights lawyer and lead writer of the report; and Jenny Yang,
director of advocacy and policy for the Refugee and Immigration Program
at World Relief, at a press conference for the release of the report
"Seeking Refuge: The Chin People in Mizoram State"Washington, D.C.
– Some 100,000 ethnic Chins from Burma have fled torture and religious
persecution in their homeland to take refuge in Mizoram state in eastern
India, where they make up an astounding 10 percent of the population –
but on paper – they don't exist.
This problem – the Chins' legal
non-existence in Mizoram – brought together a panel of humanitarian
experts on Tuesday in Washington, D.C., to raise awareness about the
plight of this highly overlooked ethnic group – 90 percent of which is
Christian – at a media event for the release of the 134-page report,
"Seeking Refuge: The Chin People in Mizoram State, India."
"Partially
due to difficulty with access into Chin state in Burma and Mizoram in
India, there has been much less focus on the Chin situation than it
really warrants," said Joel Charny, vice president for humanitarian
policy and practice at Interaction, the largest alliance of U.S.-based
relief and development organizations.
"This report shines a badly need light on a painful, neglected situation."
The
Chin people are from Chin State in western Burma. Since 1988, tens of
thousands of Chins have fled to neighboring Mizoram to escape ethnic,
political, and religious persecution under the notorious Burmese
military regime. There are an estimated 100,000 Chins in Mizoram state.
Until January 2011, foreigners were not allowed into the eastern Indian
state.
A delegation, that included panel members, traveled to
India from April 7 through May 2, 2011, to assess the situation of the
Chin people in Mizoram. What they found was a little-reported,
long-term, urban refugee problem that included the Chins in India being
considered illegal aliens and therefore in constant danger of arrest,
fines, and deportation – even though they could face torture and death
if returned home.
Because
the Chins in Mizoram are undocumented and not recognized as refugees,
they cannot obtain legal work and mostly resort to manual labor, farm
work, construction work, selling goods in markets, and maid service to
earn a living. It is not unusual for them to be underpaid, but they
cannot report it to local authorities out of fear of being arrested or
deported.
Matthew Wilch, a U.S. human rights lawyer and the lead
writer of the report, described the Chins' financial situation in
Mizorum as "chronic economic instability." Eviction of Chin families
from their rented home is very common.
It is especially hard for
Chin children born in Mizoram because they are stateless and their
parents often don't have enough money to enroll them in school.
Jenny
Yang, director of advocacy and policy for the Refugee and Immigration
program at World Relief and a member of the team that visited Mizoram
last year, said, "[I]t (the 2011 trip to Mizoram) was also unique in
that there was virtually no international presence, no non-government
organization. And UNHCR didn't have a presence at all, which meant that
the protection challenges and humanitarian challenges that the refugees
face was that much more urgent because they have no international body
providing protection for this group of people."
Yang recalled that
during the trip to Mizoram, she met a woman who was crying while
recalling her plight. The Chin woman shared to Yang that Burmese
military officials had detained and tortured her 18-year-old brother out
of suspicion that he was a pro-democracy activist. After two weeks of
being tortured in jail, her brother died. His body was released to her
parents and it was after this that the Burmese military realized that
her brother was not a pro-democracy activist but only a student.
The
woman said that her other brother was also tortured in jail, and his
left hand was cut off. With only one hand left, her brother fled to
Mizoram to escape being detained again. Back in Chin State, the woman
was a teacher and had two children. But one day she reported to
authorities that one of her 14-year-old students was raped by two
Burmese soldiers. While at the market that week, the woman's friends
informed her that Burmese authorities were at her home. Upon hearing
that, she fled to Mizoram, where she lives with her handicapped brother
and her parents.
"There is no assistance program or protection for
them whatsoever in Mizoram," Yang stressed. "Even as these refugees are
fleeing persecution in Burma, they flee to India where there is no
protection for them at all, and the fear they have is perpetual – not
just in Burma but in India as well.
"Without the legal status of a
lot of these refugees, without some sort of documentation, what we
found is that this lack of protection has affected literally every
single aspect of their lives: their livelihood, their access to
healthcare, their access to education, and literally every aspect of
their lives. They live not only in fear, but on the margins of a society
because they are not recognized as refugee in Mizoram state."
The
panel recommendation includes that the central government of India
maintain the lifting of the Restricted Area Permit (RAP) so that
humanitarian organizations, governments and individuals can travel to
Mizoram state to meet with those affected by the Chin refugee problem
and find a solution.
It also recommends the Indian government and
UNHCR establish and maintain refugee protection for Chins in partnership
with the international community, and for the Indian government to
provide Chins with legal status and access to legal and court
protections so they will be freed from the threat of arrest and
deportation.
Another recommendation is for the United States,
United Kingdom, Japan, Australia, Canada, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, New
Zealand, the Czech Republic and other countries and the European Union
to partner with the central government of India and Mizoram to provide
refugee protection and assistance to Chins.
India's Mizoram state is overwhelmingly Christian, with 95 percent of the 1 million population being followers of Jesus.
"I
cannot overstate the importance of the Christian community and church
in Mizoram state," noted Jenny Yang. "The influence of the church,
whether it is the Presbyterian church, the Baptist church, or the
Catholic church especially, is critical and they will continue to be
critical in providing any kind of assistance to refugees in the future."
On the web:
chinseekingrefuge.com