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Burma: Military offensive affecting
Karen children- KHRG - Saw
May 2, 2008 – (Irrawaddy) The ongoing military
offensive by the Burmese army against ethnic Karen rebels is affecting
Karen children who spend much of their childhoods living in fear,
hiding in the jungle, enduring disease and malnutrition, and suffering
from a lack of education, said a leading Karen rights group on Thursday.
According to a 174-page report titled Growing up under Militarisation:
Abuse and agency of children in Karen State, released on April 30
by Karen Human Rights Group (KHRG), an estimated 15,000 Karen children
are among the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) living makeshift
in the malaria-ridden jungles of eastern Burma.
The report recorded more then 160 interviews with children and their
families between 2006 and March 2008, and it draws on the personal
testimonies of villagers living in Karen State.
Among KHRG’s testimonies of abuse at the hands of the Burmese
army, one young girl was quoted as saying: “The SPDC shot
dead my daddy when he tried to run away. … My mom carried
my sister and some things and I carried my grandmother on my back.
It was very heavy for me … I saw her eyes were very big and
then I was afraid she had already died. …I carried her until
we found a better place for her.”
At a press conference in Bangkok on April 30, KHRG also highlighted
the deteriorating situation regarding children’s rights in
Karen State and distributed copies of the report, DVDs with recent
footage of displaced children in Karen State and digital copies
of photographs.
Rebecca Dun, the program director of KHRG, told The Irrawaddy on
Friday: “It is very difficult for children to study in the
jungle. They practice writing on the ground or on the cliff faces.
There are no educational aids.”
The displaced children don’t receive sufficient medicine or
nutritious food when they feel ill, she said. Also, the Burmese
army burns down Karen villagers’ houses and farms and forces
villagers to work as porters—a form of slave labor.
Meanwhile, a Karen labor advocacy group, the Federation of Trade
Unions Kawthoolei (FTUK) also released a statement on Thursday saying
that Karen villagers are facing human rights violations such as
forced labor, forced relocation and land confiscation.
FTUK said the offensive launched by the Burmese army was not only
against Karen rebels, but also Karen villagers, including women
and children.
Since the current Burmese military offensive in northern Karen State
began in February 2006, more than 370 villagers, including children,
have been killed and more than 30,000 people have been displaced.
Of those, more than 5,000 villagers have fled to the Thai-Burmese
border area, according to relief groups.
The latest wave of IDPs—more than 2,000 Karen villagers from
Mon and Kyauk Gyi townships in eastern Burma’s Pegu Division—began
fleeing to the jungle in early April 2008 following attacks by the
Burmese army’s light infantry battalions 247 and 276, according
to the Committee for Internally Displaced Karen People (CIDKP),
a Karen relief group.
The Burmese army has constructed over 60 new military camps in northern
Karen State since the beginning of its dry-season offensive in 2006
and has completed a new road through Papun District, according to
the another relief team, the Free Burma Rangers.
From:http://www.burmanet.org/news/2008/05/02/irrawaddy-military-offensive-affecting-karen-children-khrg-saw-yan-naing/
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