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How a river saved a village when war reached its doorstep
How a river saved a village when war reached its doorstep

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Sydney Morning Herald

How a river saved a village when war reached its doorstep

Zach Hope and Kate Geraghty travel to the borderlands near Myanmar, where efforts are under way to rescue thousands of trafficking victims from scam factories. See all 7 stories. Ayoung woman crouches by a gap in the bamboo fence of Thailand's biggest refugee camp, her head askew, eyes peering through barbed-wire strands at the sparse oncoming traffic. She is anticipating a taxi – a family member has a doctor's appointment in the nearest Thai town. When the car pulls up, they will need to move fast, as they do not want the attention of the guards. Almost 40,000 people live in the Mae La camp, a crowded jumble of tin and timber homes and rambling tracks, close to the border with Myanmar. The occupants are mostly Karen, an ethnic group from south-eastern Myanmar. No one is allowed to leave without special short-term permission, unless to return to the homelands they have fled over decades of civil war. Even trips to the doctor must be discreet. Mae La is the largest of nine camps on the Thai side of the border. Many residents, longing for third-country resettlement and peace, have known no other life. The latest iteration of Myanmar's civil war, brought on by the 2021 military coup that removed the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, has added 20,000 people to the camps, pushing the combined population above 100,000. Loading 'But there is no more space, so we cannot build new houses,' Karen Refugee Committee secretary Saw Bweh Say says. The committee has been operating along the Thai-Myanmar border for more than 40 years. In addition to increased population pressure, US President Donald Trump's order to freeze foreign aid has crippled the capacity of at least one major non-government organisation to deliver healthcare, water and sanitation. Another major non-government organisation, The Border Consortium, said on Friday (World Refugee Day) it had been forced to reduce rations to 'well below international standards', though it did not cite the Trump administration as the cause. While some people get help from relatives overseas and a small number slip out to work illegally, about 80 per cent depend on NGOs for their everyday needs, the secretary says. Thailand is not a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention, meaning the camp populations are not recognised as such, and are restricted in their movements and activities. 'Life in a refugee camp is you cannot work and you cannot do anything with your daily life,' 70-year-old Mae La resident Naw Mu says. 'When USAID was suspended, we faced a food shortage – they reduced the monthly food ration – and we don't get enough water. 'On the other hand, when you look at the Burma [Myanmar] situation, there is no peace. People face difficulties every day. They cannot live in their villages.' Naw Shee Eh Plo, the eldest daughter of Karen revolutionaries, came to Mae La in 1997 because it was unsafe at home. 'If we cannot go back to Burma or another country, then I prefer to stay here,' she says. 'I don't have hope for peace in Burma.' Saw Bweh Say, the Karen committee secretary, hopes Thailand will change its position on recognising refugees, allowing adults to work and children to attend formal education. Still, he is grateful. For 50 years, the Thai government and people have allowed the Karen refugees a safe haven. For those still in the Karen lands of Myanmar, life can be upended – and ended – at any moment by military air raids and drone attacks. This masthead met a group of internally displaced people in the Thai town of Noh Bo, about 50 kilometres north of the Mae La camp. Loading The men had crossed the shallow Moei River border that morning – not because of an immediate threat, but because they wanted Australians to be aware of what is happening to them and their country. The Myanmar civil war, though unfolding in Australia's region, is overshadowed by the conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine, and now Iran. But it is no less barbarous, claiming about 50,000 lives, including 6000 civilians, since February 2021. About 20 million people – more than a third of Myanmar's population – need humanitarian assistance and 3.5 million people are internally displaced. These young men are among these numbers. On February 27, the State Administration Council, as the military regime is called, bombed positions of the Karen National Liberation Army, one of Myanmar's many ethnic resistance forces. The fighting was almost at the village of Pu Lu Palaw, forcing the civilians to wade over the river to the safety of Noh Bo, aided by Thai military border patrol teams. 'We could not even bring anything with us,' Saw Hser Khu, a weathered 39-year-old former fisherman, says. Hundreds crammed inside the Noh Bo church. Hundreds more slept where they could outside. When things calmed down, they crossed back to Myanmar, but Pu Lu Palaw was still not safe. 'Mostly, people now sleep by riverbank, but those who are quick, they stay in their homes,' Saw Hser Khu says with a grin, only half-joking. Some have family on the Thailand side, and this masthead witnessed several family groups crossing the river with sacks of rice and whatever else they could carry above the waist-high waterline. Military planes are a regular sight and sound above the hazy mountains. 'If the [regime] see a lot of people in the village, they will bomb,' Saw Hser Khu says. 'We were lucky that we were already in hiding.' Almost all the group living in Pu Lu Palaw has fled there from elsewhere in Myanmar because of the fighting. Now, they are displaced again. As there is almost no work, the villagers on the riverbank rely on charity and NGOs for most of their needs. Those with a little bit of money sometimes cross into Noh Bo to buy rice and supplies. Those without often go hungry, the men say. At the end of the day, it is time for the villagers to leave Noh Bo and return to the Myanmar riverbank. This masthead follows them down the steep track, past the Thai military observation post. They pause on the way to point out an abandoned regime military base, shrouded by trees at the tip of a Myanmar mountain. At the river, we exchange thank yous and farewells. Then, they pull up their shorts and pants legs, and wade back to broken Myanmar.

The villagers who waded across a river to tell us their story
The villagers who waded across a river to tell us their story

Sydney Morning Herald

time9 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Sydney Morning Herald

The villagers who waded across a river to tell us their story

Zach Hope and Kate Geraghty travel to the borderlands near Myanmar, where efforts are under way to rescue thousands of trafficking victims from scam factories. See all 7 stories. Ayoung woman crouches by a gap in the bamboo fence of Thailand's biggest refugee camp, her head askew, eyes peering through barbed-wire strands at the sparse oncoming traffic. She is anticipating a taxi – a family member has a doctor's appointment in the nearest Thai town. When the car pulls up, they will need to move fast, as they do not want the attention of the guards. Almost 40,000 people live in the Mae La camp, a crowded jumble of tin and timber homes and rambling tracks, close to the border with Myanmar. The occupants are mostly Karen, an ethnic group from south-eastern Myanmar. No one is allowed to leave without special short-term permission, unless to return to the homelands they have fled over decades of civil war. Even trips to the doctor must be discreet. Mae La is the largest of nine camps on the Thai side of the border. Many residents, longing for third-country resettlement and peace, have known no other life. The latest iteration of Myanmar's civil war, brought on by the 2021 military coup that removed the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, has added 20,000 people to the camps, pushing the combined population above 100,000. Loading 'But there is no more space, so we cannot build new houses,' Karen Refugee Committee secretary Saw Bweh Say says. The committee has been operating along the Thai-Myanmar border for more than 40 years. In addition to increased population pressure, US President Donald Trump's order to freeze foreign aid has crippled the capacity of at least one major non-government organisation to deliver healthcare, water and sanitation. Another major non-government organisation, The Border Consortium, said on Friday (World Refugee Day) it had been forced to reduce rations to 'well below international standards', though it did not cite the Trump administration as the cause. While some people get help from relatives overseas and a small number slip out to work illegally, about 80 per cent depend on NGOs for their everyday needs, the secretary says. Thailand is not a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention, meaning the camp populations are not recognised as such, and are restricted in their movements and activities. 'Life in a refugee camp is you cannot work and you cannot do anything with your daily life,' 70-year-old Mae La resident Naw Mu says. 'When USAID was suspended, we faced a food shortage – they reduced the monthly food ration – and we don't get enough water. 'On the other hand, when you look at the Burma [Myanmar] situation, there is no peace. People face difficulties every day. They cannot live in their villages.' Naw Shee Eh Plo, the eldest daughter of Karen revolutionaries, came to Mae La in 1997 because it was unsafe at home. 'If we cannot go back to Burma or another country, then I prefer to stay here,' she says. 'I don't have hope for peace in Burma.' Saw Bweh Say, the Karen committee secretary, hopes Thailand will change its position on recognising refugees, allowing adults to work and children to attend formal education. Still, he is grateful. For 50 years, the Thai government and people have allowed the Karen refugees a safe haven. For those still in the Karen lands of Myanmar, life can be upended – and ended – at any moment by military air raids and drone attacks. This masthead met a group of internally displaced people in the Thai town of Noh Bo, about 50 kilometres north of the Mae La camp. Loading The men had crossed the shallow Moei River border that morning – not because of an immediate threat, but because they wanted Australians to be aware of what is happening to them and their country. The Myanmar civil war, though unfolding in Australia's region, is overshadowed by the conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine, and now Iran. But it is no less barbarous, claiming about 50,000 lives, including 6000 civilians, since February 2021. About 20 million people – more than a third of Myanmar's population – need humanitarian assistance and 3.5 million people are internally displaced. These young men are among these numbers. On February 27, the State Administration Council, as the military regime is called, bombed positions of the Karen National Liberation Army, one of Myanmar's many ethnic resistance forces. The fighting was almost at the village of Pu Lu Palaw, forcing the civilians to wade over the river to the safety of Noh Bo, aided by Thai military border patrol teams. 'We could not even bring anything with us,' Saw Hser Khu, a weathered 39-year-old former fisherman, says. Hundreds crammed inside the Noh Bo church. Hundreds more slept where they could outside. When things calmed down, they crossed back to Myanmar, but Pu Lu Palaw was still not safe. 'Mostly, people now sleep by riverbank, but those who are quick, they stay in their homes,' Saw Hser Khu says with a grin, only half-joking. Some have family on the Thailand side, and this masthead witnessed several family groups crossing the river with sacks of rice and whatever else they could carry above the waist-high waterline. Military planes are a regular sight and sound above the hazy mountains. 'If the [regime] see a lot of people in the village, they will bomb,' Saw Hser Khu says. 'We were lucky that we were already in hiding.' Almost all the group living in Pu Lu Palaw has fled there from elsewhere in Myanmar because of the fighting. Now, they are displaced again. As there is almost no work, the villagers on the riverbank rely on charity and NGOs for most of their needs. Those with a little bit of money sometimes cross into Noh Bo to buy rice and supplies. Those without often go hungry, the men say. At the end of the day, it is time for the villagers to leave Noh Bo and return to the Myanmar riverbank. This masthead follows them down the steep track, past the Thai military observation post. They pause on the way to point out an abandoned regime military base, shrouded by trees at the tip of a Myanmar mountain. At the river, we exchange thank yous and farewells. Then, they pull up their shorts and pants legs, and wade back to broken Myanmar.

The villagers who waded across a river to tell us their story
The villagers who waded across a river to tell us their story

The Age

time9 hours ago

  • Politics
  • The Age

The villagers who waded across a river to tell us their story

Zach Hope and Kate Geraghty travel to the borderlands near Myanmar, where efforts are under way to rescue thousands of trafficking victims from scam factories. See all 7 stories. Ayoung woman crouches by a gap in the bamboo fence of Thailand's biggest refugee camp, her head askew, eyes peering through barbed-wire strands at the sparse oncoming traffic. She is anticipating a taxi – a family member has a doctor's appointment in the nearest Thai town. When the car pulls up, they will need to move fast, as they do not want the attention of the guards. Almost 40,000 people live in the Mae La camp, a crowded jumble of tin and timber homes and rambling tracks, close to the border with Myanmar. The occupants are mostly Karen, an ethnic group from south-eastern Myanmar. No one is allowed to leave without special short-term permission, unless to return to the homelands they have fled over decades of civil war. Even trips to the doctor must be discreet. Mae La is the largest of nine camps on the Thai side of the border. Many residents, longing for third-country resettlement and peace, have known no other life. The latest iteration of Myanmar's civil war, brought on by the 2021 military coup that removed the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, has added 20,000 people to the camps, pushing the combined population above 100,000. Loading 'But there is no more space, so we cannot build new houses,' Karen Refugee Committee secretary Saw Bweh Say says. The committee has been operating along the Thai-Myanmar border for more than 40 years. In addition to increased population pressure, US President Donald Trump's order to freeze foreign aid has crippled the capacity of at least one major non-government organisation to deliver healthcare, water and sanitation. Another major non-government organisation, The Border Consortium, said on Friday (World Refugee Day) it had been forced to reduce rations to 'well below international standards', though it did not cite the Trump administration as the cause. While some people get help from relatives overseas and a small number slip out to work illegally, about 80 per cent depend on NGOs for their everyday needs, the secretary says. Thailand is not a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention, meaning the camp populations are not recognised as such, and are restricted in their movements and activities. 'Life in a refugee camp is you cannot work and you cannot do anything with your daily life,' 70-year-old Mae La resident Naw Mu says. 'When USAID was suspended, we faced a food shortage – they reduced the monthly food ration – and we don't get enough water. 'On the other hand, when you look at the Burma [Myanmar] situation, there is no peace. People face difficulties every day. They cannot live in their villages.' Naw Shee Eh Plo, the eldest daughter of Karen revolutionaries, came to Mae La in 1997 because it was unsafe at home. 'If we cannot go back to Burma or another country, then I prefer to stay here,' she says. 'I don't have hope for peace in Burma.' Saw Bweh Say, the Karen committee secretary, hopes Thailand will change its position on recognising refugees, allowing adults to work and children to attend formal education. Still, he is grateful. For 50 years, the Thai government and people have allowed the Karen refugees a safe haven. For those still in the Karen lands of Myanmar, life can be upended – and ended – at any moment by military air raids and drone attacks. This masthead met a group of internally displaced people in the Thai town of Noh Bo, about 50 kilometres north of the Mae La camp. Loading The men had crossed the shallow Moei River border that morning – not because of an immediate threat, but because they wanted Australians to be aware of what is happening to them and their country. The Myanmar civil war, though unfolding in Australia's region, is overshadowed by the conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine, and now Iran. But it is no less barbarous, claiming about 50,000 lives, including 6000 civilians, since February 2021. About 20 million people – more than a third of Myanmar's population – need humanitarian assistance and 3.5 million people are internally displaced. These young men are among these numbers. On February 27, the State Administration Council, as the military regime is called, bombed positions of the Karen National Liberation Army, one of Myanmar's many ethnic resistance forces. The fighting was almost at the village of Pu Lu Palaw, forcing the civilians to wade over the river to the safety of Noh Bo, aided by Thai military border patrol teams. 'We could not even bring anything with us,' Saw Hser Khu, a weathered 39-year-old former fisherman, says. Hundreds crammed inside the Noh Bo church. Hundreds more slept where they could outside. When things calmed down, they crossed back to Myanmar, but Pu Lu Palaw was still not safe. 'Mostly, people now sleep by riverbank, but those who are quick, they stay in their homes,' Saw Hser Khu says with a grin, only half-joking. Some have family on the Thailand side, and this masthead witnessed several family groups crossing the river with sacks of rice and whatever else they could carry above the waist-high waterline. Military planes are a regular sight and sound above the hazy mountains. 'If the [regime] see a lot of people in the village, they will bomb,' Saw Hser Khu says. 'We were lucky that we were already in hiding.' Almost all the group living in Pu Lu Palaw has fled there from elsewhere in Myanmar because of the fighting. Now, they are displaced again. As there is almost no work, the villagers on the riverbank rely on charity and NGOs for most of their needs. Those with a little bit of money sometimes cross into Noh Bo to buy rice and supplies. Those without often go hungry, the men say. At the end of the day, it is time for the villagers to leave Noh Bo and return to the Myanmar riverbank. This masthead follows them down the steep track, past the Thai military observation post. They pause on the way to point out an abandoned regime military base, shrouded by trees at the tip of a Myanmar mountain. At the river, we exchange thank yous and farewells. Then, they pull up their shorts and pants legs, and wade back to broken Myanmar.

South Korean civil groups deliver solidarity aid for democracy in Myanmar
South Korean civil groups deliver solidarity aid for democracy in Myanmar

Korea Herald

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • Korea Herald

South Korean civil groups deliver solidarity aid for democracy in Myanmar

Two South Korean civil society leaders visited the Thai-Myanmar border town of Mae Sot to express support for Myanmar's pro-democracy movement and deliver financial aid for wounded resistance fighters, the Resource Center for Asian NGOs at Sungkonghoe University said Wednesday. Park Eun-hong, director of the Resource Center for Asian NGOs at Sungkonghoe University, and Jeon Yae-rin, deputy leader of the Democracy School without Borders, met with members of the People's Defense Force on June 13. The PDF is a civilian militia formed in response to the military coup led by Senior General Min Aung Hlaing on Feb. 1, 2021. The grassroots resistance has continued for over four years in pursuit of restoring democracy in Myanmar. During their visit, Park and Jeon delivered financial support for the treatment of injured PDF fighters and shared an educational video about key issues in South Korea's democratic development. The video was produced using compensation funds received by former Seoul Education Superintendent Cho Hee-yeon and other pro-democracy activists, which were donated to the Asia Democracy and Human Rights Fund under the Beautiful Foundation. On June 14, the pair also visited the Sunshine Care Center. Around 120 injured individuals are receiving treatment at the makeshift medical facility under dire conditions, without proper medical personnel or equipment, according to Park. "South Korean society, which once overcame martial law and authoritarian rule, must show greater concern for the suffering of the Myanmar people and the violence of the military regime," Park said. "Even a small gesture of solidarity can be a great source of strength for Myanmar citizens." Mae Sot, located in western Thailand near Myanmar's Karen State, has become a critical refuge for civilians and resistance fighters fleeing military persecution since the 2021 coup.

Thai military closely monitoring clashes in Myanmar's Dawei township
Thai military closely monitoring clashes in Myanmar's Dawei township

The Star

time08-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Star

Thai military closely monitoring clashes in Myanmar's Dawei township

BANGKOK: The Thai military in Kanchanaburi is monitoring ongoing clashes between anti-junta forces and Myanmar military troops in Dawei Township, located in Myanmar's Tanintharyi region. According to the Lat Ya Task Force, fighting between Myanmar's military and anti-government forces has been ongoing since April 7. On April 19, the resistance forces successfully seized the first strategic command post, located approximately 10 kilometres from the Thai-Myanmar border. Following this victory, the anti-junta forces intensified their operations, launching continuous attacks on Myanmar military bases near the Ban Phu Nam Ron Border Pass. Given the escalating situation, the Surasee Force and the Thai-Myanmar Border Command Centre in Kanchanaburi have been closely monitoring developments, the task force reported. - Photo: The Nation/ANN The Lat Ya Task Force has coordinated with government agencies and local authorities by deploying additional personnel and military equipment. They have also enhanced operational measures along the border near Ban Phu Nam Ron, conducting round-the-clock military activities to mitigate any impact on local communities. Furthermore, the Surasee Force has been working closely with the Royal Thai Air Force (RTAF) in the event of any aerial activity by neighbouring countries near the border, aiming to prevent violations of Thai sovereignty amid regional unrest. - The Nation/ANN

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