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: Malaysia
Malaysia rounds up Acehnese refugees for deportation
By John Roberts
26 August 2003
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In a flagrant attack on democratic rights, Malaysian police
last week set up road blocks around the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) office in Kuala Lumpur and detained scores
of people seeking to register as refugees. Many were from the
war-torn province of Aceh on the northern tip of the island of
Sumatra where the Indonesian military has been conducting a huge
offensive against separatist guerrillas since May.
Last Tuesday several hundred Acehnese, including women and
children, were seeking to register at the UNHCR office as refugees
and to obtain documents from UNHCR officials. Some already held
documents identifying them as refugees awaiting third country
settlement. Instead of allowing the asylum seekers to enter the
UNHCR office, police seized them from taxis and private vehicles
and bundled them into police trucks. They were initially held
at a police station before being transferred to the Langkap detention
centre in the northern state of Perak. In all, 232 people were
detained.
UNHCR spokesman Evan Ruth described the Malaysian governments
action was unprecedented. He said because of the situation
in Aceh we believe that these civilian Acehnese must be
protected and should not be returned to Aceh. At least 600
people have been killed so far in the Indonesian military offensive
and a series of human rights abuses have been reported.
Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi defended
the police detentions and declared last Wednesday that Malaysia
intended to deport the Acehnese. If foreigners are found
without valid entry permits, they will be sent back. This is the
law of the country, he said. But after protests by lawyers
and non-government organisations, Badawi indicated the government
may allow some detainees to stay temporarily but ruled out granting
asylum.
Late last week, however, immigration officials in Perak announced
that 120 of the 232 detained had agreed to return to Aceh and
their relatives in Malaysia to pay the expenses. While no explanation
was provided, the refugees were obviously put under duress.
The Malaysian government is under pressure from Jakarta to
deport the Acehnese. The speaker of Indonesias Peoples
Consultative Assembly (MPR), Amien Rais, publicly warned Malaysia
to seriously consider the adverse effect on bilateral
relations of a decision to grant the refugees even temporary residence.
Rais, who is a strong supporter of the offensive in Aceh, said
such a decision would mean that Indonesia had failed to give full
protection to its own citizens. I suggest that Malaysia
handle the matter seriously, consider it with full calculation,
in order to avoid possible tension with Indonesia, he warned.
The Malaysian government has a long history of trampling on
the rights of refugees and immigrants. In the immediate aftermath
of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohammad launched a vicious campaign against illegal immigrants,
seeking to make them the scapegoats for the rapid rise in unemployment
and decline in living standards.
Malaysia is one of the few countries that has refused to sign
the 1951 UN Convention on refugees. The countrys Immigration
Act makes no distinction between illegal immigrants and refugees
effectively denying anyone refugee status. The Act provides heavy
penalties for anyone entering the country without a permit: a
fine of up to 10,000 ringgit ($US2,600); imprisonment for up to
five years and six strokes of the rotan (cane); and deportation
to the country of origin.
One recent high profile case involved an Acehnese, Ahmad Adnan,
who, along with his family, was subjected to persecution by the
Indonesian military. Despite being granted refugee status by the
UNHCR in July 2002, he was arrested in April and tried without
legal representation. He was convicted and sentenced to 10 months
imprisonment, two strokes of the rotan and denied the right to
appeal.
Only the efforts of the UNHCR led to a higher court ordering
a new trial and the eventual dropping of the charges. Ahmad Adnan
was rearrested, however, and taken to an immigration depot to
await deportation. He was only freed after Denmark agreed to accept
him for resettlement.
A report released in early August by the US-based Human Rights
Watch detailed serious abuses by Malaysian authorities against
Rohingya Muslims fleeing from Burma. The ethnic group from the
Burmese province of Arakan has suffered the systematic persecution
under the Burmese military junta. The Human Rights Watch report
points to cases of beatings, extortion and arbitrary detention
of the Burmese in Malaysia. Schooling and health care are denied
to the refugees as a matter of course.
Deputy Prime Minister Badawis announcement that some
Acehnese detainees may be allowed to remain temporarily in Malaysia
represents no fundamental shift of policy. Rather it reflects
concerns that opposition parties might capitalise on the plight
of the Acehnese. The government has no intention of changing its
draconian anti-immigrant laws or halting the persecution of thousands
of refugees.
See Also:
Malaysian government
cracks down on immigrant workers
[4 February 2002]
Long-running trial
of Malaysian human rights activist
[15 July 1999]
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