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Library Burma's Internally Displaced: No Options for a Safe Haven

Burma's Internally Displaced: No Options for a Safe Haven

Burma's Internally Displaced: No Options for a Safe Haven

Resource information

Date of publication
октября 2002
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
OBL:47076

Refugees International Advocate Veronika Martin and human rights lawyer Betsy Apple recently completed an assessment mission to the Thai-Burmese border.

There are few fates worse than being an internally displaced person (IDP) in Burma. IDPs inside Burma are divided into two categories: those living under the strict control of the Burmese government in �relocation sites,� and those living in hiding in the jungle from the Burmese army. Both options present a high risk of human rights abuses, a lack of food, and limited or no access to healthcare and education. According to a recent report compiled by the Burma Border Consortium (BBC), more than 2,500 villages have been either destroyed, relocated, or abandoned, affecting 633,000 individuals over the last five years in eastern Burma. Since 1996, an estimated minimum of one million people living in the ethnic states that border Thailand have been displaced. This year has seen a marked increase in the frequency of counter-insurgency operations in ethnic minority areas, leading in turn to an increase in the level of internal displacement...

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Veronika Martin
Betsy Apple

Geographical focus