Malaysia: Acehnese Refugees Face a Triple Threat
14 Apr 2005 12:51:00 GMT
Source: NGO latest
Kavita Shukla and Larry Thompson
Refugees International - USA
Website: http://www.refugeesinternational.org
April 12, 2005

Contacts: Kavita Shukla and Larry Thompson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or 202.828.0110

Malaysia: Acehnese Refugees Face a Triple Threat

Refugees in Malaysia from Indonesia's Aceh province are facing a
triple threat: their families and lands have been devastated by the
tsunami; their communities in Aceh continue to be in the crossfire as
conflict persists in the province; and they are subject to arrest and
deportation as illegal migrants in Malaysia. On March 1 the Malaysian
government launched Operation Tegas, a campaign to crack down on
illegal migrants. Since then more than 4,000 people have been arrested
and dozens have already been sentenced to jail or whipping. As the
Malaysian government does not differentiate between refugees and
undocumented economic migrants, Acehnese with asylum claims have been
rounded up in this crackdown and are in danger of being sent back to
Indonesia.

The Acehnese have been coming to Malaysia to escape being caught in
the crossfire between the Indonesian military and the rebel Free Aceh
Movement or Gerakan Aceh Merdeka (GAM). Since 2003, when the
Indonesian government imposed martial law and started a military
campaign in Aceh, large numbers of men have fled to Malaysia.
According to the asylum seekers interviewed by Refugees International
in Malaysia, the military does not differentiate between rebels and
civilians. It suspects most Acehnese men of collaborating with the
rebels and they can be picked up at any time by the army. Once
arrested, the Acehnese report being tortured by methods such as having
their ears slit, fingers smashed, nails pulled out, and plywood placed
on the body and then stepped upon in efforts to make them reveal
information about the rebels' strongholds and activities.

For Acehnese asylum seekers the protection situation in Malaysia has
been poor. The country has not ratified the 1951 Convention Relating
to the Status of Refugees and labels all undocumented persons as
illegal immigrants making them subject to harsh immigration laws. The
immigration authorities have widespread powers to arrest, detain and
eventually deport undocumented people. In some cases, refugees have
even been picked up by immigration while just outside the UNHCR
compound in Kuala Lumpur.

The Acehnese taken into custody by police told RI that sometimes they
were let go after they paid a bribe, but once they are in the hands of
immigration authorities it is virtually impossible to be released.
Immigration places people in detention centers, described by local
NGOs as overcrowded with unsanitary facilities, until they are
deported or manage to get third country resettlement. The Acehnese are
most at risk during deportations. Unlike asylum seekers from other
countries, who are released at Malaysia's border with Thailand, the
Acehnese are put on ferries, along with other Indonesians, and taken
to Indonesia. The deportees' names are shared in advance with
Indonesian authorities who receive them at the other end and order
them to get in separate lines based on their place of origin. The
Acehnese have a great fear of deportation, as some have gone missing
through the process, never making it back to their villages. There are
also accounts of Acehnese being rearrested upon deportation, beaten
and interrogated about GAM, and released only after a bribe is paid.
terrogated about GAM, and released only after a bribe is paid.

Malaysian law enforcement agents have given varying degrees of
recognition to protection documents given by UNHCR to Acehnese asylum
seekers. While these documents are generally respected by the police,
there are still cases of Acehnese with UNHCR papers being arrested,
charged in court, or sent to detention centers to await deportation.
UNHCR is usually able to negotiate for them not to be forcefully
deported, but they must endure long detention periods as they await
resettlement.

At the outset of Operation Tegas, UNHCR was successful in working out
an informal agreement with Malaysian officials so that refugees with
papers from UNHCR would not be arrested in the crackdown. However,
divisions regarding this amnesty soon surfaced between different
government officials and some immigration officials continue detaining
people with UNHCR documents. Sufriadi, a 16-year-old minor whose
father was shot in cold blood in front of him during an Indonesian
military operation in Aceh, is among those arrested. He was taken into
custody on March 17 by an immigration official, his UNHCR documents
were disregarded, and he was charged under the Immigration Act for
being an illegal. He is being held in Kajang prison, awaiting his
hearing, which is not due until the end of May.

Besides protection problems, their illegal status in Malaysia
restricts Acehnese from accessing social services. Medical care is
vital because according to UNHCR, Acehnese men from the ages of 18 to
35 have the most injuries and signs of torture; they arrive with
broken bones, scars, x-rays showing bullets lodged in their skulls and
emotional trauma. But because many of the Acehnese in Malaysia work as
construction laborers, porters, and palm oil plantation laborers, they
are unable to earn enough to pay for much-needed medical care. As few
international NGOs are present in Malaysia, little humanitarian
assistance reaches the Acehnese.

The Acehnese interviewed by RI emphasized that Malaysia is the best
country of refuge for them, given the similarities in culture and
language, until the situation improves in Aceh. They were perplexed,
however, as to why the Malaysian government, which has provided so
much support to the people of Aceh following the December 2004
tsunami, would keep its doors closed to Acehnese seeking refuge within
Malaysia. The asylum seekers stressed that Malaysia and the
international community must take into account the triple threats they
are experiencing.

Refugees International, therefore, recommends that:

The Government of Malaysia: • Respect the principle of non-refoulement
and ensure that any Acehnese picked up in the crackdown on illegal
migrants are not deported to Indonesia. • Protect Acehnese and other
asylum seekers registered with UNHCR during crackdowns by invoking
section 55 of the Immigration Act of Malaysia. • Consider granting the
Acehnese temporary stay permits along the lines of the permits granted
in 2004 to the Rohingya refugee population from Burma.

International aid community: • Divert some of the funding received for
the Acehnese people, following the tsunami, to the Acehnese refugee
community in Malaysia, and to the UNHCR operation in Malaysia,
especially as the humanitarian access window to Aceh becomes smaller.

UNHCR: • Continue to refer for third country resettlement those
Acehnese needing long term medical and psychological care which they
are unable to obtain at present due to the Malaysian government's
policies.

Advocates Kavita Shukla and Larry Thompson assessed the situation for
Acehnese refugees in Malaysia in March.

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not
of Reuters. ]
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/fromthefield/219053/111348368083.htm





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