Pakistani Christian refugees face ordeal in Thailand

The continuing injustice of Pakistan Christians struggling to seek asylum was publicized by the FOX News media on August 3, 2015 in an article entitled “Pakistani Christian refugees face ordeal in Thailand.” R.E.A.L. assisted the reporter Mary Kekatos in obtaining news sources and details. We urge the public to share this important information and to assist in obtaining financial assistance to Pakistan Christian refugees in Thailand.

Pak-Christians IDC
March 2015: Approximately 100 Pakistani Christian refugees sleep in one room in Thailand’s Immigration Detention Center. (British Pakistani Christian Association)

The FOX News report stated:

“Pakistani Christians escaping to Thailand from persecution in their native country are not receiving the protection they so desperately need as they face poverty, arrest and possible deportation.

Thousands of Pakistani Christians have fled their homes due the country’s reported mistreatment of religious minorities. Fleeing to Southeast Asian countries due to how cheap and easy it is to maintain a tourist visa, these Christians soon discover they are not to be treated well in their new home either.

Because Thailand is not a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention or its 1967 Protocol, and does not have a formal national asylum framework, the Pakistani Christians are not treated as refugees or asylum seekers but as illegal immigrants. Often, Thailand will not grant asylum status to those declared genuine refugees by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

“The poor can’t and don’t escape but the middle and upper classes flee to Thailand,” said Wilson Chowdhry, chairman of the British Pakistani Christian Association, who has issued an appeal and a petition calling for help for the refugees. “[Back in Pakistan] they are doctors, lawyers, professors, politicians.”

“Pakistan’s blasphemy law has been used in a way to target religious minorities,” said Phil Robertson, deputy director of the Asia Division of Human Rights Watch in a separate interview. “There has been violence perpetrated against people accused of blasphemy. When facing that kind of persecution, many have no choice but to leave.”

Those fleeing Pakistan face tough roads. They are often stopped by border guards when suspected of being Christians even with a legal visa or plane tickets. Many are not allowed to cross the border until they have paid a bribe or a fine. When Raymond John and his family crossed the border, they had to pay the guards 112,000 Pakistani rupees ($1100).

“We refused twice and they would not let us pass but on the third time we finally paid,” John said.

In European countries and the United States, it can be an arduous and expensive process to apply for a tourist visa. Although easy to obtain one from Thailand, the Pakistanis’ stay is anything but easy. Upon arrival, the refugees realize they cannot attain citizenship and cannot buy property. Even if a Pakistani marries a Thai citizen, they are not granted legal citizenship and their status is returned to refugee upon their spouse’s death.

Farrukh Saif, head of the Farrukh Saif Foundation dedicated to helping persecuted Pakistani Christian refugees, has criticized the delay of the UNHCR to classify the Christians who have fled to Thailand as refugees, saying it affects the livelihood of those seeking asylum.

“According to a mandate, in 90 days they have to determine the status of these people as refugees, but in reality it can take four to five years,” he said. “If a minor, a child, cannot go to school for four to five years, what is his future? A whole generation of Pakistani Christians in Bangkok is being destroyed.”

UNHCR’s Field Media Officer for Thailand, Vivian Tan, said that by nature, refugee status determination (RSD) is time-consuming and labor-intensive.

“In many urban settings, the demand for RSD exceeds processing capacities. In Bangkok, UNHCR has been working to speed up processing times,” she said.

Refugees would agree that the process has been anything but speedy. Sunny Gil arrived in Thailand in August 2013 and was given an appointment with the UNHCR for an interview in May 2015 to be assigned refugee status. When the time came for the interview, however, it was postponed for a year.

“It is silly – the excuses that they give for postponing the interviews. It is such a big organization and they should be able to help us,” he said.

Additionally, because these Pakistanis do not have refugee status, they are not allowed to work and therefore have no legal income. They often make their money doing illegal jobs or begging and seeking charity from churches.

“We want to work and we want to earn and support our families on our own,” said Cyril Lamran of the Christian Asylum Seekers Association of Thailand and a refugee himself. “But they’re not giving us the opportunity for us to earn and not providing us basic human rights.”

Tourist visas last up to two months after which they can only be renewed if the applicant is working. Because, however, the Pakistani Christians are treated as illegal immigrants and are unable to work, their visas cannot be extended making them subject to arrest and detention at any point in time.

In March, upwards of 400 Pakistani Christian refugees were reported to have been arrested. Homes were raided by the Thai immigration police and the arrestees were taken to be held at the central jail or the Immigration Detention Center (IDC) in the capital of Bangkok.

Former inmates speak of horrendous conditions including cramped cells, inadequate nutrition and children being incarcerated with adults. In the central jail, the men are bound in shackles and forced to stand in the hot sun. In the IDC, up to 200 people can be packed in a room meant for 100 leaving very little space to properly sleep. Many have since been released for up to a year until they get a proper visa, otherwise they face being put back in the IDC or being deported back to Pakistan.

While Gil said he could perhaps see why people were being sent to the IDC (his own sister-in-law was held in central jail and the IDC for one month), he could not understand the need to send refugees to the former.

“The central jail is for criminals, not asylum seekers, but they put us in jail like we are criminals,” he said. “Even though they are not signatory, there is something called human rights.”

Other concerns also plague these families. The refugees do not have the money to cover medical costs and multiple families often are forced to share a single room because they cannot afford the rent.

Currently, there are an estimated 4500 Pakistani Christian refugees living in Thailand and while they wait for help, activists stress the dire need for action to be taken, requesting the international community to hasten the determination process of the UNHCR.

“The UNHCR is the mother of human rights but they’re essentially denying human rights,” John said. “The West has to know the persecution the Christians face in Pakistan and in Thailand. Who will speak for us when those who speak will speak for the government?” “

Fake Document Deception to Appear as if from UNHCR Thailand Must Be Rejected

In private emails and private social media communications, Responsible for Equality And Liberty has identified a FAKE letter which was forged to make it appear like it was from the UNHCR Thailand office dated July 10, 2015, which was sent to some in the Pakistan Christian community.  We must STRESS – this July 10, 2015 letter is a FAKE and is FRAUDULENT.

It is an amateur effort to DECEIVE the public.   Please do not circulate this FAKE LETTER – it is NOT from the UNHCR Thailand.

Among the obvious errors by this amateur FAKE letter: 
a. It has the wrong letterhead
b. The phony letterhead has part of the telephone number missing
c. The name of the organization being quoted is incorrect (contact me for details)
d. There are numerous errors throughout the letter, such as in the subject line the word “Christian” is misspelled as “Chrsitain” and numerous other errors.

e. There are other details in the forgery which we have shared with leaders of the Pakistan Christian community.

R.E.A.L. has contacted human rights leaders in the Pakistan Christian community with the details and photos of errors to show how obviously this letter was FORGED – it is NOT from the UNHCR Thailand.

Our human rights campaigns have the strength of the TRUTH on their side.  There is nothing stronger than the TRUTH in our struggle for our shared universal human rights.  We urge all those who see this letter to reject it as a fake.  If you need more information or if you have information on the source of this letter, contact R.E.A.L. at usa@realcourage.org

Our universal human rights matter – this is a TRUTH for all

Responsible for Equality And Liberty

 

Rohingya Muslim Mass Graves in Multiple Countries

Multiple news sources have been reporting updates on the human rights crisis and ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims, including mass graves in multiple countries, as a result of refugees fleeing from oppression in Myanmar to Malaysia, Thailand, and other countries.  This includes a new report of the discovery of new mass graves on Monday, June 23, 2015, near the Thailand immigration offices and half a mile from a Thailand police office.  Both Thailand government officials and Malaysia police officers have been arrested as co-conspirators.

Australia broadcasting media reported that this human rights atrocity begins with the responsibility of Myanmar government actions to force the Rohingya out of the country by destroying their homes and businesses, burning them down and bulldozing them.  “About 140,000 Rohingya were forced away from the city, into an area of dried up mud flats near the sea now known as the Sittwe internally displaced people camp. They live on rations provided by the United Nations and the area has been fenced so they cannot leave.”  Australia reporter Mark Davis stated “A Buddhist extremist mob turned on them very violently, their houses were burnt down, their businesses were burnt down, their wealth was taken away from them and they were pushed out of Sittwe and fled to the coast.”

As we have previously posted, the news media has reported on Myanmar Buddhist extremists’ burning alive of Rohingya Muslims within Myanmar, including a March 2013 atrocity at Meikhtila, where 36 Rohingya Muslims, mostly teenagers, who were slaughtered before the eyes of police and local officials who did almost nothing to stop it.  The Associated Press reported on such atrocities of burning people alive, including burning 36 children: “Their bones are scattered in blackened patches of earth across a hillside overlooking the wrecked Islamic boarding school they once called home.  Smashed fragments of skulls rest atop the dirt. A shattered jaw cradles half a set of teeth. And among the remains lie the sharpened bamboo staves attackers used to beat dozens of people to the ground before drowning their still-twitching bodies in gasoline and burning them alive.” According to Radio Free Asia, seven were arrested for this atrocity.  This is the level of persecution and atrocities against human rights in Myanmar which drove these refugees to flee their country.

A man stands among the rubble of a burned building in Meikhtila, where 36 Muslims were burned to death (Source: RFA)
A man stands among the rubble of a burned building in Meikhtila. Myanmar, where 36 Muslims were burned to death in March 2013 (Source: RFA)

New reports have provided details on mass graves found in Thailand and Malaysia, as a result of human trafficking of such refugees who fled from Myanmar. Mass graves have been the result of Rohingya Muslims fleeing persecution in Myanmar, and becoming victims of mass murder at the hands of human traffickers. Reports of military atrocities waged against the Rohingya Muslims have included rape and forced labor, and the Post Media network has reported Rohingya Muslim Abdul Hashim saying that men have even been known to be burned alive.

Rohingya Muslim Mass Graves in Malaysia and Thailand (Source: The Guardian)
Rohingya Muslim Mass Graves in Malaysia and Thailand (Source: The Guardian)

In Malaysia, the Post Media Network reported on mass graves on June 5, 2015, stating “Thrust under the spotlight this week by the discovery of 139 graves in Malaysian jungle camps used by suspected human smugglers, the Rohingya are stateless in their own southeast Asian nation, denied citizenship, their movements and even marriages severely restricted by the government.” The Guardian reported that “Malaysian police say they have uncovered 28 suspected human trafficking camps located about 500 metres from the country’s northern border, a day after authorities reported the discovery of multiple mass graves.”

Thailand: A child's shoe abandoned at a smuggling camp for Rohingya refugees, with torture facilities and graves (Source: ABC)
Thailand: A child’s shoe abandoned at a smuggling camp for Rohingya refugees, with torture facilities and graves (Source: ABC)

The Australia Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) has also sent reporters who have found additional mass graves and torture camps.  On June 11, 2015, Australia Broadcasting reported on a smuggling camp where people were put in cages, reporting that “small children are believed to be among up to 1,000 Rohingya Muslims who fled a filthy Thai people-smuggling camp where people appear to have slept in bamboo cages and been punished in a torture chamber.”  “The ABC’s 7.30 program visited the camps near the southern Thai town of Padang Besar, where residents knew about the trafficking of Rohingya Muslims but kept quiet for fear of retribution from smugglers.  Some locals financially gained from the trade in human misery.”

On Monday, June 23, 2015, Australia Broadcasting had a new report on a mass grave discovered just minutes from the Thailand immigration offices.  ABC stated that “As Thai and Malaysian authorities continue their hunt for hidden graves of refugees in a remote border jungle, the biggest gravesite of all may have been discovered hidden in plain sight. Just 800 metres (half a mile) from the front door of the police centre in the Thai border town Padang Besar, and a five-minute stroll from the Thai immigration office, lie dozens of concealed graves of Rohingya refugees who have fled abject persecution in their homeland Myanmar. More than 100 secret graves might lie in the small cemetery, and overlooking the site just metres away is the house of the smuggler believed to have put them there.”

Young Rohingyan man 'Buraq' shows where the bodies of his friends are buried in a mass grave site near the border crossing into Malaysia from Thailand (Source: Australia Broadcasting)
Young Rohingyan man ‘Buraq’ shows where the bodies of his friends are buried in a mass grave site in Padang Besar, Thailand, near the border crossing into Malaysia from Thailand (Source: Australia Broadcasting)

Australia news reporter Mark Davis interviewed Rohingya victims, and stated “If families didn’t pay the men were beaten to death, the women were raped to death in many cases, and the children were not spared.”  A former guard of one of the Thailand human trafficking camps reported showed the reporter where additional bodies were buried.  “The former guard led Davis to a mass grave in the nearby town of Padang Besar where he had personally buried about 20 Rohingya bodies in a field of about 100 graves. The site was located behind a police station and overlooking this graveyard was the newly built mansion of one of the smugglers.”

Australia news reported “Shockingly, most people around the camps must have known about their existence. Davis said the camps were not that remote. ‘One guard said there were 50 camps that had thousands of people in them, these were surrounded by villages and roads, this has been happening on an industrial scale for the last three years,’ Davis said.  Hundreds of people, sometimes 500 in one day, would be transported to these jungle camps in trucks and cars. ‘The idea that someone didn’t know about this is laughable now,’ Davis said.  The mayor of Padang Besar and his deputy have recently been arrested for their involvement in the trade and a senior Thai general has also been arrested but Davis said this was just the tip of the iceberg of who was involved.”

In Malaysia, the Rakyat Post met with Rohingya Muslim victims of the camps in Perlis (Malaysia) and Thailand who managed to secure their freedom from their captives.  They interviewed one of the camp victims, Aminah Khatu, who stated “Before I left, they started burning down our homes. People kept saying ‘go to Malaysia, there people live happily’. This is why I got on the boat.  I got on a small boat for a few days before being transferred to a ferry where we were left at sea for two months. Later on, we were transferred into a small boat to reach Thailand.  I was in the Thailand jungles for a month.” According to the Post, “she said the conditions in the camp in the jungle were terrible and the ground they were placed on was always watery.”  The Post reported that she stated ” ‘My children felt sick and one of them passed away there after he fell ill. I called my husband who was in KL (Kaula Lampur) at that time and told him that one of our children had passed away so he must get us out of the camp quick.’ She said her husband told her that he did not have money to do so immediately. ‘My husband told me he did not have enough money, but he later managed to gather RM5,000 by borrowing it from his friends. I passed the money to the agent and he took it, but he still refused to let us go. He cheated us and we remained in the camp for another 15 days. After that, my husband had to find another RM6,000 and paid that sum to them before they released us.’  She said her experience at the camp was horrible and they fed them very little. ‘We had nothing there. They fed us a little rice and curry and a little jelly. When someone died, they just threw the body in the jungle. Those who were very sickly were also thrown into the jungle to die.'”

In Malaysia, 12 police officers were arrested in connection with the Perlis, Malaysia mass graves and human rights atrocity.  Malaysia  Deputy home minister Datuk Dr Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar stated that “12 police officers have been arrested, four by the police and eight by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC). ”

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) supports the universal human rights of all people, including their right to freedom of religion, security, dignity, as well as their right to protect their nationality, in accordance with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), Article 15.   The Rohingya Muslim refugees must be given human rights, dignity, and a sanctuary from their oppression in Myanmar.

 

Myanmar Rohingya Muslim Refugees Resettling in USA — World Crisis Continues

In a follow-up from our report last year on Myanmar refugee resettlements, the U.S. Department of State Refugee Processing Center indicates a number of Myanmar   Muslim refugees are finding resettlement options.

The U.S. Department of State Refugee Processing Center indicates that 3,000 Myanmar Muslims refugees have been resettled in the United States of America in the past year, with over 13,000 resettled in the United States since 2002.  While it is progress that an increasing number have found refuge in the United States, the deep and horrific problems of Myanmar Rohingya Muslims require the attention of the world’s nations, and support for this human rights and refugee crisis.   On June 6, we reported that the UNHCR is seeking an additional $13 million to deal with the Southeast Asia boat crisis.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) supports the universal human rights of all people, including their right to freedom of religion, security, dignity, as well as their right to protect their nationality, in accordance with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), Article 15.

The world must continue to respond to the human rights crisis in Myanmar, and the persecution of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar (Burma). A year ago, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a Resolution 418 urging the Burmese government to end the persecution of ethnic minority Rohingya Muslims.  But in dealing with such human rights crises, words are not enough and the Rohingya Muslim refugees must be given human rights, dignity, and a sanctuary from their oppression in Myanmar.

The progress stands in stark relief to magnitude of the ongoing human rights problem, with literally hundreds of thousands stateless refugees seeking safe conditions, who have fled to Asian countries including Bangladesh, Malaysia, and Thailand.

Rohingya Muslims seeking to cross the Naf river into Bangladesh are turned away by border guards. (Source: Munir Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty Images)
Rohingya Muslims seeking to cross the Naf river into Bangladesh are turned away by border guards. (Source: Munir Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty Images)

As the U.S. Campaign for Burma states, “The Rohingya are a Muslim ethnic minority living in northern Arakan/Rakhine State in western Burma. They have faced severe persecution and violence at the hands of the state and national governments for decades. There are approximately 1.33 million Rohingya in Burma, but the country’s 1982 Citizenship Law denies them citizenship in spite of the fact that Rohingya have lived in Burma for generations.” “On January 13, 2014, Rakhine mobs and security forces entered Du Chee Yar Tan, Maungdaw Township, and slaughtered over 40 Rohingya. A UN report confirms the gruesome deaths – severed heads of at least 10 Rohingya, some children, were found bobbing in a water tank.” “Forced to venture by boat to trafficking camps on remote Thai islands, the Rohingya are faced with violence, lack of food and water (often forced to drink their own urine), and those who have fallen victim to disease are thrown overboard if dead or close to dying.”

500-Rohingya-rescued-off-Indonesia

As we previously reported in November 2014, the Fortify Rights group did research concluding that, “Myanmar state security forces are complicit in and profiting from the increasingly lucrative maritime human trafficking and smuggling of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar’s Rakhine State, Fortify Rights revealed in a briefing released today. Since 2012, Myanmar state security forces in Rakhine State have collected payments from Rohingya asylum seekers fleeing Myanmar by ships operated by transnational criminal syndicates, according to information obtained by Fortify Rights. In some cases, the Myanmar Navy escorted boats operated by criminal gangs out to international waters.”

“Of the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya that have fled to Bangladesh, Thailand, and Malaysia to escape persecution and adversity, approximately 300,000 Rohingya live in squalid conditions in Bangladesh where they are denied access to food supplies, medical aid, and education.”

We lead in human rights solutions with our hearts and our conscience.  These suffering Myanmar Rohingya Muslims must have the same universal human rights as as all other people around the world.

 

2000px-Department_of_state

UNHCR Seeks $13M for Southeast Boat Crisis

R.E.A.L. reports that the UNHCR is seeking $13 million to step up response to Southeast Asia boat crisis. The UNHCR spokeperson Melissa Fleming provided a press briefing, on June 5, 2015, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva seeking funds for refugees and migrants from Southeast Asia, specifically mentioning the plight of Rohingya Muslim refugees fleeing from Myanmar.

500-Rohingya-rescued-off-Indonesia

“UNHCR is seeking US$13 million to help with the needs of new boat arrivals in South-East Asia, where thousands of refugees and migrants have been crossing the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea. The appeal was launched yesterday, and is aimed at beefing up our work to do with protection for the nearly 4,800 people from Myanmar and Bangladesh who have been disembarked from smugglers’ boats in the last month. In the latest incident, earlier this week, over 700 people were landed in Myanmar’s Rakhine state. They included some 120 women and children who said they had been at sea for at least three months. With the monsoon season imminent, it’s estimated that thousands of people may still be at sea.”

“UNHCR’s appeal follows from last Friday’s regional meeting of affected States held in Bangkok. It also reflects elements of a 10-point plan of action proposed by UNHCR, the International Organization for Migration and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. The funds will allow UNHCR to step up its response in three main areas: Firstly by helping meet the international protection needs of new boat arrivals, secondly by enhancing information available to people considering the journey, and thirdly by targeting some of the root causes of these movements in source countries. To date, UNHCR’s teams have registered just over 1,000 Rohingya new arrivals in Indonesia. In southern Thailand we have distributed relief supplies and are counseling dozens of new arrivals, while in Malaysia we are scaling up to meet the needs of arrivals once consistent access is provided.”

“Additional resources are needed to set up mobile multi-functional teams to quickly identify and help people with specific protection needs. Refugees who cannot return home will need assurance that they can stay in host countries temporarily with access to legal work until conditions are conducive for voluntary return or until other solutions are found. Where possible, UNHCR will support livelihood programs within national structures to serve the needs of both refugees and host communities.”

“The appeal envisages training for the region’s search-and-rescue officials on international legal principles and protection, and exploration of predictable disembarkation options. UNHCR will also expand its monitoring and reporting on maritime movements to include information campaigns providing factual information to potential travelers about the risks and mistreatment at the hands of smugglers and traffickers. To reduce incentives for people to undertake these dangerous sea journeys, UNHCR will seek legal alternatives such as programs to transition from refugee to migrant status in host countries in need of temporary migrants. A key part of the appeal focuses on mobilizing support for humanitarian, human rights and development needs in source countries to address the root causes of movement. UNHCR is ready to work with the governments to address issues of citizenship and documentation of people in Bangladesh and in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.”

Thailand: New Arrests of Pakistan Christians – Please HELP

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) has received reports of new arrests in Thailand of Pakistan Christians who are seeking asylum, in the Samrong district of Bangkok.

We are being given reports today, June 6, 2015, that Thai police arrested eight Pakistani Christians asylum seekers including three men, three women, one elderly woman and a ten month old baby in the Samrong area of Bangkok today.

R.E.A.L. calls for the Thailand government to show mercy for these individuals being detained as they continue to seek asylum through the UNHCR office and await UNHCR Bangkok review of their case for Refugee Status Determination (RSD).

As we see from today’s report, Pakistan Christian refugees who have fled to Thailand are being arrested by the security forces before the UNHCR interviews them and makes a decision on their case. They are not getting the opportunity to be considered for such asylum and refugee status, as these women, children, and men get rounded up and put into Immigration Detention Center (IDCs).

Thailand: Pakistan Christians Praying for the Release of Christians Arrested by Thai Police in Immigration Detention Centres (IDC)  (Source: Pukkar News)
Thailand: Pakistan Christians Praying for the Release of Christians Arrested by Thai Police in Immigration Detention Centres (IDC) (Source: Pukkar News)

In May 2006, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) identified Pakistan to be designated as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC) by the Department of State, due to its abuses against freedoms. Pakistan remains a “Tier 1” Country of Particular Concern to the this U.S. Government organization.

R.E.A.L. has been repeatedly petitioning the Thailand government on this matter, and we have provide detailed documentation of the Pakistan Christian oppression for Thailand government representatives for their consideration of mercy towards these asylum seekers.

The U.S. Embassy in Thailand has provided a statement to R.E.A.L., that once the UNHCR makes an RSD decision on these refugees, it will also consider their cases for U.S. asylum as well. The Pakistan Christian refugees clearly meet the refugee standards as described in UNHCR Resettlement Handbook, Chapter 5, Section 5.7.1.

But we need the UNHCR to accelerate its process of getting review of Pakistan Christians’ refugee status, and we call for the Thailand government to use patience in allowing the refugees’ reviews by UNHCR to get completed. We call for the Thailand government use mercy and restraint for these Pakistan Christian refugees in Thailand to have the right to get UNHCR refugee status interviews and consideration, without being put in Thailand prisons. These desperate individuals need time for the UNHCR to process their cases and give them an opportunity for asylum in nations where they will not be oppressed due to their religion.

While Thailand may not be a signatory to the specific 1951 Refugee Convention, Thailand is a signatory to many other international agreements and laws which protect the rights and dignity of Pakistan Christians who only seek our shared universal human rights of freedom of religion and security, which have been denied to them by Pakistan.

Thailand is a signatory to the:
— Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) (December 10, 1948)
— International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) (October 29, 1996)
— Convention against Torture and Other Cruel Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (October 2, 2007)
— Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (January 9, 2012)
— Convention on the Rights of the Child (March 27, 1992)

In Pakistan, these refugees and their children have been these rights. They are not only Pakistan Christians, they are our fellow human beings who have all of the rights which Thailand and the nations of the world agree to ensure for them in our community of humanity. They have the right to the international legal protection under these agreements which Thailand has signed as one of the nations of the world.

It is morally and ethically wrong for refugees fleeing from Pakistan fleeing because of conditions where they are being such rights, to also be denied freedoms in another nation which is a signatory to these international laws and covenants.   Pukkar News also quotes Farrukh Harrison Saif: “The international community has to put pressure on Thai government, not to arrest the asylum seekers, because asylum is not a crime. It is a right of any individual or a family or group.”

We urge the public to share this concerns with the Kingdom of Thailand government, the UNHCR, and the OHCHR.

Please share your voice with these agencies and institutions. Please also find the Thailand embassy in your nation, and reach out to it on this issue.

Kingdom of Thailand
The Secretariat of the Prime Minister
Government House, 1 Phitsanulok Road, Dusit, Bangkok 10300
General Prayut Chan-o-cha, Prime Minister
Secretariat_PM@opm.go.th
FAX: 66 02 282 5131

Kingdom of Thailand
Royal Thai Embassy
1024 Wisconsin Avenue, NW, Suite 40
Washington, DC 20007
United States
Contact: H.E. Mr. Pisan Manawapat – Ambassador
Telephone: (202) 944-3600
Thailand Embassy/Consulate Email: information@thaiembdc.org, consular@thaiembdc.org

Kingdom of Thailand
Royal Thai Embassy
Plots No.1 – 20 Diplomatic Enclave-1
Sector G-5/4 Islamabad, Pakistan
Tel. (92 51) 843 1270-80 : 1113
Tel. (92-51) 8431270
Fax. (92-51) 8431288,8431291
Ambassador Mr. Leochai Jantarasobat
Telephone: (92 51) 843-1297
royalthaiembassyislamabad@gmail.com
Third Secretary Mr. Thom Petchpugdepeong
(92 51) 843 1270-80 : 1113
thomkkp@gmail.com
http://www.thaiembassy.org/islamabad/en/org-chart

UNHCR Regional Representative in Thailand
3rd Floor, United Nations Building, Rajdamnern Nok Avenue, 10200 Bangkok, Thailand
Telephone: 66 2 288 1858
FAX: 66 2 280 0555
Email: thaba@unhcr.org

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
Case Postale 2500
CH-1211 Genève 2 Dépôt
Switzerland (Suisse)
Telephone: +41 22 739 8111
FAX: +41 22 739 7377

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
The Director of UNHCR Office
P.O. Box 20
Grand Central, New York, NY 10017
United States
Telephone: 1-212-963-0032
Facsimile: 1-212-963-0074
Email: usane@unhcr.org

Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)
Regional Office for South East Asia
6th Floor, United Nations Buidling, Rachadamnern Nok Avenue, Bangkok 10200, Thailand
Tel: +66 2 288 1235
Fax: +66 2 288 1039
Email: ohchr.bangkok@un.org
Ms. Matilda Bogner
Regional Representative
+66 81 755 0826
bogner@un.org

Our message to Thailand, UNHCR, OHCHR, and the people of the world is PLEASE – join us and be Responsible for Equality And Liberty – for all.

Human Rights for Oppressed Christians: Love Means Action

Christian human rights matter, as Christians as oppressed around the world, a call to love one another is a call to action for human rights.

Christians worship and pray on Friday, known as “Good Friday” to the Christian community, as they remember the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. As they do so, there is no greater time for Christians to remember this sacrifice of love and take such action to demonstrate their love for one another by actively supporting the oppressed people around the world, including their Christian brothers and sisters.

Across the nation and the world in churches on Easter Sunday, there will be Christian pastors and worshipers who will rejoice in their eternal salvation through Jesus, which is truly the point of the Christian faith.

On this Good Friday, Christians can also remember Jesus’s painful, brutal sacrifice of his life on Earth for humanity, as well as the commandment he gave his followers. In John 13:34-35, Jesus is quoted as with this new commandment “A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” This was a command, not a suggestion, and it is an imperative for the billions in the Christian community.

The commandment to love one another must be more than social pleasantry. Christians are right to offer kindness and friendship in their community and fellow human beings are the world. Love is an active verb seeking more than pleasant thoughts, and it calls for action to help those in need. The command to love one another means giving our outstretched hand to our brothers and sisters in humanity around the world, suffering from oppression, poverty, abuse, and despair. As a Christian myself, surely our hearts are big enough that when we love one another, we can reach out to help one another. That is what people who love one another do.

The Christian ethic requires that we reach out and love one another of every identity group, religion, ethnic background around the world, including our defense of rights of our fellow human beings, who we are taught to love.

Certainly this outreach must also include love and support for their fellow Christians who face oppression and violence. With 2.2 billion Christians in the world, the commandment to love one another should produce group the largest human rights activists in the world. Instead, there are small, but determined groups of human rights activists, missionaries, and asylum supporters, whose courage and persistence provide an example for the entire community. Their impact and influence of these activists far outweighs their limited numbers. The Christian community of 2.2 billion can do much more and must coordinate more of their efforts in defending the human rights of oppressed people around the world, including our own Christian brothers and sisters.

As a starting point, let us assume that if we love one another, we believe that our fellow human lives’ matter. The eternal lives of Christians have always been our priority, as it must be in the Christian faith. But our love for one another should also include a commitment to work for the rights and security of our fellow Christians, rather than abandon them around the world to be hunted down, tortured, imprisoned, and killed. Our loved ones deserve that we care for their well-being. All of the lives of our fellow human beings matter; Christian lives matter as well.

Yet in many churches around the world, the oppression of our fellow human beings and of our fellow Christians will be not the topic of sermons in weeks and months to come. Many are uncomfortable discussing such issues, and billions of Christians are uninformed by their religious leaders. Christian churches are for prayer and honoring God, not for politics. But following the command to love one another is not a political issue; it is a moral issue of responsibility to love one another, and to care for each other’s well-being.

The oppression of Christians around the world is every bit of an evil as the historic bondage and slavery that we have challenged for generations for Christians and others around the world. Within the Christian community, we need a new generation of abolitionists, who seek the abolition of oppression of our Christian brothers and sisters. They need to be freed from the slavery of oppression, torture, and murder; they need to be freed from prisons where they are enslaved for their faith. If we love one another, surely the injustice to them must be a cause for our action.

We can do more in defending the human rights of oppressed Christians around the world, who are regularly being tortured, raped, murdered, and imprisoned. We Christians must pray. But we must also reach out our hands, open our hearts, and open our lives to our brothers and sisters who need help. There must be more than us shaking our heads and stating “isn’t that a shame.” If we are commanded to love one another, that command calls for us to do something to help our loved ones in times of need. As we remember the sacrifice for us, surely we can sacrifice for those we are commanded to demonstrate our love.

The Open Doors organization estimates 100 million Christians face persecution, and according to the International Society for Human Rights, up to 80% of acts of persecution are directed at people of the Christian faith. If we seek to act to love one another, we must also work to help our brothers and sisters suffering around the world. It is not pleasant to see this suffering or to recount it. Perhaps some leaders view the problem of our oppressed brothers and sisters too unpleasant to discuss. But the Christian community must come together to understand the magnitude of the oppression of Christians today. This is a global problem, and it requires context of the global issue for the resources of the billions of Christians to work together.

There is no crime, no abuse of human rights, no murder that cannot be committed against Christians around the world – without apparent impunity. The billions of Christians need to become aware of this and develop a voice of love for one another, where we seek the protection of our loved ones. Our love for one another must be a challenge to those who oppress Christians around the world, and to reject the policies of Dechristianization by extremists in nation after nation.  The universal human rights of all people include the freedom of religion for Christians.

In Pakistan, we have seen attacks on three churches in the past two weeks, and we have seen the continuing institutional abuses of Christian minorities. On March 15, two Christian churches were attacked during Sunday prayer services in the Youhanabad neighborhood of Lahore, with 15 killed that day and nearly 80 injured. Another three more Christians died from the attack, including a six year old girl, bringing the death toll from that attack alone to 18, and the situation has continued to worsen with arrests of hundreds of Christians. Days later, another Christian church was targeted for an attack in Pakistan. Pakistan Christians have long been a target of attack, abuse, mob murder, violence, and oppression. This has included use of the Pakistan “blasphemy” law to rationalize oppression, imprisonment, and violence against Christians. Mobs have previously destroyed Christian villages in Gojra, burned to death a Christian husband and wife in Kasur district, and have made numerous attacks on Christians. The Pakistan “blasphemy” law is also used to imprison Christians such as Pakistan woman Asia Bibi, based on hatred and grudges from non-Christians against them; Asia Bibi has been given the death sentence for trumped up and false charges of blasphemy and remains in a Pakistani prison.

In Thailand, Pakistan Christian refugees have been seeking asylum, and 300 have recently been arrested and placed in Immigration Detention Centers, while the UNHCR reviews their status in applying for asylum in fleeing from the oppression of Pakistan. We continue to reach out to the Kingdom of Thailand government, the UNHCR, and United States government to provide some mercy for these refugees seeking asylum from oppression due to their faith.

In Kenya, the latest crime against Christian human rights took place on Thursday in the attacks by the terrorist group Al-Shabaab killing 147 and wounding 79 at the Garissa University College. Christians were hunted down and hand-picked for execution by the terrorist group. The terrorist group has previously targeted Christians in a December 2014, killing 36 in the village of Kormey. The Al-Shabaab group has made numerous other attacks in Niger and Kenya – attacking churches, Christian shops, and pastor’s homes.

In India, an elderly nun was recently raped in West Bengal’s Ranaghat at the Convent of Jesus and Mary at Ranaghat, Nadia District. A rash of recent anti-Christian attacks in India has including an attack on a church under construction in the Haryana’s Hisar district. Reuters India has reported that Christians feel “under siege” in India as a result of recent attacks on them.

In Libya in February 2015, 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians were marched on their knees to a bloody beheading filmed by the ISIS terrorist organization, with the beaches of Libya covered with their blood. The ISIS terror group was proud of its grisly accomplishment and shared the video of their terrorist atrocity which it called as “a message signed with blood to the nation of the cross.”   Egyptian Copts have protested the outrageous murder of Christians by this terrorist group.

In Syria, ISIS terrorists recently kidnapped over 200 Christians, thousands of Christians have been forced from their homes, and according to the BBC, Syrian Christians have been ordered to convert to Islam, pay jizya (a religious levy), or face death.

In Egypt on March 27, 2015, a Coptic Christian church being built in Al Our village in the Minya governorate being built to honor the 21 Christians beheaded by ISIS in Libya, was attacked by an angry mob with Molotov cocktails, injuring seven people and burning a Christian worshiper’s car.

In Nigeria, reports continually flow in about Christian churches being burned down in town after town. As of October 2014, Nigerian news reported that “185 churches have been razed and 190,545 people displaced.” This was after the global terror organization Boko Haram’s attack on Nigerian towns in Borno and Adamawa states. In November 2014, Fr. Gideon Obasogie, Head of Social Communications of the Diocese of Maiduguri, has provided news media with further updates on the destruction of Diocese of Maiduguri, with the fall of Mubi, with an estimated 2,500 Catholic Christians killed, 100,00 Catholics displaced, and over 50 churches destroyed. Christian churches and lives have been a target for destruction by the Boko Haram terrorist group, as well as terrorist attacks throughout northern Nigerian causing thousands of women and children to flee the country to neighboring nations.

In Communist China, on March 25, 2015, a Chinese Christian preacher Huang Yizi, who opposed an ongoing “anti-church” demolition campaign that saw hundreds of places of worship destroyed, has now been jailed on trumped-up charges of “gathering crowds to disturb social order.” The Communist Chinese Party (CCP) court sentenced him to one year in prison. The totalitarian CCP has long sought to oppress people of faith and conscience as part of oppression of universal human rights. Chinese Christian have regularly had prayer sessions to protect their houses of worship, but we have reported on numerous cases where the CCP authorities bully Chinese Christians and bulldoze their house of worship.

In the United States of America, African-Americans have been a target of abuse in major cities throughout the country. This has included Christian African-Americans in the city of Ferguson, Missouri. Christian leaders have come out of their pulpit to have a voice for human rights, dignity, and justice, but also to call for peace. As one woman pastor sought to keep the peace, she was shot in the stomach by a 60 caliber rubber bullet causing a bloody wound. But she stood back up and continued her commitment for peace and dignity.

As Christians worship during this Holy Week, in terms of rights, lives, and dignity of their fellow Christians and other fellow human beings, there is much that needs to be done. This is hardly a comprehensive list of the current oppression on Christians’ human rights, but the point is that this is a global problem, which needs a global solution.

The commandment for love is not only for quiet prayer, but also a call for acting in love. For our fellow Christians, it is a call to get our leaders to influence and change the views of nations where Christians are routinely oppressed, tortured, imprisoned, and killed. It is a call to work together to find ways to help, provide asylum, and find routes for Christians who flee such oppression to find a safe haven.

Americans had a history in addressing the disgrace of slavery for those fleeing such states where human rights and dignity were denied for African-Americans. They created a network of secret routes and safe houses for enslaved African-Americans to escape slave states and their oppressors. This commitment to their journey to freedom was a commitment to human rights. Just as Americans did in their history of providing safe haven (and continuing to fight for the rights) of African-Americans, so Christians around the world must come to the aid of those Christians seeking asylum from oppressive nations.

While we need long-term efforts to change the conditions where Christians are oppressed, we also need immediate action to help our fellow Christians in crisis. Groups such as the Pakistan Christian Congress, OpenDoors, Jubilee Campaign, ChinaAid, Christian Asylum Seekers, Iman Foundation Trust, Farrukh Saif Foundation, and others seek to work to help Christians in crisis, and they need your support.

To help Christians in crisis, we also need our own “underground railroad” to help oppressed Christians fleeing oppressor nations to find freedom. We need to work with our government agencies, United Nations refugee organizations, NGOs, and other refugee organizations to help oppressed Christians who are forced to flee their oppressors find a refuge in a free nation. Christian human rights organizations need to find ways to work more cohesively together for greater impact in human rights and safety of Christians around the world.

Open Doors reports that each month 322 Christians are killed for their faith, 214 churches and Christian properties are destroyed, and 772 forms of violence are committed against Christians. In Kenya alone, on Thursday, 147 people were killed, mostly Christian – in ONE DAY.

If we follow the commandment to love one another, and we respect the human rights of our fellow human beings, these global patterns of oppression must be unacceptable to the billions of Christians.

Love Means Action. Christian Lives Matter.  All Lives Matter.

Love-Means-Action

Thailand: New Arrests of Pakistan Christian Refugee Seekers and Communications with Refugee Groups

Volunteer human rights group Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) is receiving updates on continuing arrests of Pakistan Christian refugees in Thailand, as well as new communications with refugee organizations on this urgent issue. We urge the human rights community to act to end the ongoing arrests of Pakistan Christian refugee seekers in Thailand. Today’s arrests this afternoon (March 13) was mostly of Pakistan Christian women and children seeking asylum from oppression in Pakistan.

New Arrests

After what appeared to be a brief delay, there has been a massive group of arrests of Pakistan Christian refugee seekers in Thailand today. The Thailand police have been arresting such refugees who have been waiting for the UNHCR to act on their application for refugee status. The most recent arrests include an emphasis on arresting women and children of such individuals who have applied to UNHCR for refugee status. We are receiving new reports both of new arrests and of new interest by some in the UNHCR and other refugee organizations. (UPDATE: CBN has posted a video news story on the recent arrests.)

In terms of has received local reports that there were arrests of 300 refugee seekers early today, on March 13, 2015. We have been getting reports arrests in the early morning in Thailand, arresting women, children, and men who are Pakistan Christian refugees, with Thai police searching in building to arrest Pakistan Christians. Later in the day on March 13, 2015, we received reports that that “44 children, 43 women, and 35 men were arrested by police.”

The Farrukh Saif Foundation reports: “Immigration Police of Thailand, with the military, raided the houses of asylum seekers living in Samrong district. Hours before raiding the houses, the area and streets were cordoned off by Thai military; it was like an operation against Criminals. Asylum seekers from inside their homes kept calling around to their other asylum seekers for prayers, calling UNHCR also for protection, but their fate was unavoidable. As soon as the operation started, the Thai military smashed the doors and entered in the rooms of asylum seekers and started arresting the people. Minor kids, women, young and old everyone were treated in an inhuman way. Loads of people were arrested and shifted to Samrong Police station. Many were crying, begging and requesting, showing their asylum seekers certificates but none paid any heed. We immediately rushed to the Samrong Police station but no one was in the mood to cooperate. All arrested people were held in the car parking area and later on they were be seated on the floor inside the police station and Immigration police and other authorities were not ready to listen to any request.”

As reported on March 9, 2015, R.E.A.L. and other human rights groups have appealed to the UNHCR HQ, UNHCR Bangkok, Thailand Prime Minister, Thailand Ambassador in the United States, and the United States Charge d’affaires at the United States embassy in Bangkok, and the United States Immigration Service at the United States embassy in Bangkok.

We are receiving reports that the double-persecuted Pakistani Christian refugees who fled religious oppression and persecution in Pakistan are now suffering in Thailand detention. The detention center’s condition has been reported as very poor, overcrowded and highly unhygienic, with women, children, and elderly sick in jail.

The U.N. has previously reported on this issue in 2011, four years ago.

New Communications on Refugee Issues

R.E.A.L. has been calling the Thailand ambassador in the United States and we are trying to get an audience with him on this matter in Washington, D.C.

One suggestion that we offered was to urge the United States of America government to provide sanctuary to these Pakistan Christian refugees.

The U.S. Bangkok Refugee Section (BnkRefugeeSection@state.gov) replied to R.E.A.L. that if the UNHCR refers such cases to the United States, then the United States can act under the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP). In response to our request if such Pakistan Christian refugees could be accommodated under U.S. CIS asylum application Form I-589, Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal, we received the following response from U.S. Bangkok Refugee Section: “Regarding resettlement to the United States, under the guidelines of the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP), refugees are eligible for consideration for refugee resettlement in the United States if UNHCR determines that they require third country resettlement for protection reasons and refers the case to the USRAP. If UNHCR believes someone should be resettled in a third country, they will refer the case to a resettlement country, such as the United States, Canada, or Australia. ”

Many mature Americans will remember the past activities of the United States in granting asylum to Russian refugees from the Communist Totalitarian U.S.S.R. within U.S. Embassies around the world. Certainly the Pakistan Christian refugees fleeing their oppression have just as much right to asylum and protection by free nations.

Within the United States, R.E.A.L. has also contacted the UNHRC offices in New York City and Washington DC in our efforts to get attention on this issue. We previously contacted the UNHCR headquarters offices in Switzerland and the UNHRC Bangkok field office. We have expanded our call to action the UNHRC Director’s office in New York City, and the Washington DC office, with a call to expedite the issue of Pakistan Christian refugees.

We are in communication with those who are also reaching out to U.S. Congressional representatives on this issue.

Among all of the arrests of refugees in Thailand, we have also heard that some in the UNHRC are beginning to listen, and some additional asylum interviews are being scheduled. This is the importance of using our global voice to defend our oppressed brothers and sisters in humanity.

The UNHCR reports that its 2015 partner NGO agencies in Thailand include: Adventist Development and Relief Agency, American Refugee Committee, Catholic Office for Emergency Relief and Refugees, Handicap International, International Rescue Committee, Jesuit Refugee Service, Première Urgence – Aide Médicale Internationale, The Border Consortium

R.E.A.L. has been urged to reach out to other Christian leaders to get their international support, and we call for major Christian leaders around the world to take a stand on this issue of religious freedom and dignity. We call upon American Christian leaders, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, Pope Francis, and Christian leaders around the world to speak out for the oppressed Pakistan Christians, both the refugees in Thailand and those continuing to be oppressed in Pakistan. R.E.A.L has been in touch with the Jubilee Campaign, Open Doors, and other organizations.

We have also been contacted by other Pakistan Christian refugee organizations looking to make a difference.

This includes:

Iman Foundation Trust

Christian Asylum Seekers Association

The Farrukh Saif Foundation

and of course, the Pakistan Christian Post of the Pakistan Christian Congress

Government and Refugee Community Points of Contacts

The following are points of contact that we have reached on this topic within the government and the refugee community. These are being shared in the hopes that other human rights activists will also follow up with these individuals to make it clear that this is a shared concern for action on this urgent issue. If you have other contacts, please let us know at usa@realcourage.org, so that we can update this information.

UNHCR, New York: The Director of UNHCR Office in New York, P.O. Box 20 Grand NY 10017, Grand Central, 10017 New York, NY, United States,
Telephone: 1-212-963-0032
Fax: 1-212-963-0074
Email: usane@unhcr.org

UNHCR Regional Representative in Thailand
3rd Floor, United Nations Building, Rajdamnern Nok Avenue, 10200 Bangkok, Thailand
Telephone: 66 2 288 1858
FAX: 66 2 280 0555
Email: thaba@unhcr.org

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
Case Postale 2500
CH-1211 Genève 2 Dépôt
Suisse (Switzerland)
Telephone: +41 22 739 8111
FAX: +41 22 739 7377

UNHCR, Washington DC
1775 K Street, NW, Suite 300, 20006 Washington, DC, United States
Telephone: 1-202-296-5191
Fax: 1-202-296-5660
Email: usawa@unhcr.org

Embassy of the United States of America
Bangkok, Thailand
Chargé d’affaires, a.i.
W. Patrick Murphy
GPF Tower A, 10th Floor, 93/1 Wireless Road, Bangkok 10330, Thailand
Telephone: +66-2-205-4485
Central Fax: +66-2-650-8921
http://bangkok.usembassy.gov/cda.html

U.S. Bangkok Refugee Section
Embassy of the United States of America
Bangkok, Thailand
Refugee and Migration Affairs (RMA) Office
Political Section
120-122 Wireless Road, Bangkok, 10330 Thailand
Telephone: +66-2-205-4000
Fax: +66-2-205-4375
E-mail: BnkRefugeeSection@state.gov
http://bangkok.usembassy.gov/rma_contact.html

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (BKK CIS)
Address: Sindhorn Building, Tower 2, 15th Floor, 130-132 Wireless Road, Bangkok 10330, Thailand
Telephone: 02-205-5352 (within Thailand)
Telephone: 011-662-205-5352 (from the United States)
Email: BKKCIS.Inquiries@uscis.dhs.gov
Field Office Director: Gregory Sanders
http://bangkok.usembassy.gov/embassy/usgmain/uscis.html

Kingdom of Thailand
The Secretariat of the Prime Minister
Government House, 1 Phitsanulok Road, Dusit, Bangkok 10300
General Prayut Chan-o-cha, Prime Minister
FAX: 66 2 282 5131

===========================================

Today’s letter by R.E.A.L received by UNHCR in NYC and Washington DC.

March 13, 2015

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
The Director of UNHCR Office
P.O. Box 20
Grand Central, New York, NY 10017
United States
Telephone: 1-212-963-0032
Facsimile: 1-212-963-0074
Email: usane@unhcr.org

cc:
UNHCR Regional Representative in Thailand
3rd Floor, United Nations Building, Rajdamnern Nok Avenue, 10200 Bangkok, Thailand
(Telephone: 66 2 288 1858 FAX: 66 2 280 0555 Email: thaba@unhcr.org)

UNHCR, Washington DC: 1775 K Street, NW, Suite 300, 20006 Washington, DC,
(Telephone: 1-202-296-5191, Facsimile: 1-202-296-5660, Email: usawa@unhcr.org)

URGENT: UNHCR Action Needed for Pakistan Christian Refugees in Thailand

UNHCR Director’s Office –
I am with the human rights volunteer group Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), and I am contacting you on behalf of Pakistan Christian refugees who have fled from Pakistan due to the oppressive religious discrimination that they are facing in that country. They have applied for UNHCR refugee status and they are seeking asylum as refugees.

On March 9, 2015, I contacted the UNHCR Headquarters and the UNHCR Regional Representative in Thailand on this issue, and I have not heard back from either on this emergency issue.

I have heard directly from Thailand-based refugees who have applied for asylum as refugees with the UNHCR offices in Bangkok, Thailand. Some of these refugees have been waiting for years on a refugee status decision. In the meantime, the Thailand police are arresting Pakistan Christian asylum seekers.

On March 9, 2015, I was directly contacted about a round of arrests of Pakistan Christian refugees in Thailand. On the early morning of March 13, 2015, I have heard that 300 such Pakistan Christian refugees were arrested in Thailand. In the past two hours, I have heard that more arrests of Pakistan Christian refugees have happened “44 children, 43 women, and 35 men arrested by police.” We have also been told today that the Thai military smashed the doors and entered in the rooms of asylum seekers and started arresting the people. Minor kids, women, young and old everyone were treated in an inhuman way. Loads of people were arrested and shifted to Samrong Police station. Many were crying, begging and requesting, showing their asylum seekers certificates but none paid any heed.”

We are calling for the UNHCR Director’s Office, the Thailand field office, and the UNHCR Headquarters to act on behalf of these UNHCR Pakistan Christian refugees seeking asylum.

In addition, I have been in direct contact with the U.S. Bangkok Refugee Section (BnkRefugeeSection@state.gov) on this matter. The U.S. Bangkok Refugee Section states that if your UNHCR organization refers these cases to the United States, then the United States can act under the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP). I am certain that many, many Americans would support such an action to assist in the refugee support. At least give this opportunity a chance.

Pakistan Christian women, children, and men refugees are desperately seeking asylum as refugees from the oppression that they routinely face in Pakistan.

I join with the Pakistan Christian Congress and other human rights groups which call for your agencies to take action to protect the universal human rights, dignity, and security, of such refugees who have placed their hopes in your commitment to the universal human rights that the United Nations has itself declared as standard for all nations of the world.

On March 8, the world celebrated International Women’s Day. Today women and children Christian refugees fleeing from Pakistan are now hiding from arrests going on in Thailand, while they have been awaiting action by the UNHCR.

There are many thousands of Pakistan Christian asylum seekers who are contributing members to Thailand and its economy while they await the UNHCR decision on their asylum applications with office of UNHCR in different cities of Thailand.

Pakistan Christian refugees seeking asylum by Thailand have been communicating in an appeal to human rights groups to address their plight. One such Pakistan Christian asylum seeker, Jarvas Jerry, died last week as he was waiting for medical care, which apparently came too late. Mr. Jarvas Jerry died in the Siri raj hospital Bangkok on February 28, 2015. He had applied for asylum with the UNCHR.

Please act to support these women, children, and men Christian refugees in Thailand who are only seeking the universal human rights that the United Nation is committed to in its Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) for the world.

Jeffrey Imm, Founder
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
The United States of America

===========================================

Thailand: Pakistan Christians have fled to Bangkok as refugees from oppression in Pakistan
Thailand: Pakistan Christians have fled to Bangkok as refugees from oppression in Pakistan

Thailand and UNHCR: Appeal for Mercy to Refugees

The day after International Women’s Day, we have been contacted by Pakistan Christian refugees in Thailand, about women fleeing from persecution in a country they fled to as refugees.

There are thousands of women, children, and men in Thailand who have applied for refugee status with the UNHCR, are being abandoned by the forces of human rights, and the Thailand police have started a new round of arrests of law-abiding Pakistan Christian refugees, and the UNHCR delays have allowed their visas to expire.

As our good friend with the Pakistan Christian Congress, Dr. Nazir Bhatti states, “according to International rules of Refugee under UN, it is bound to take decision on asylum applications with 90 days that any countries immigration rules may not effect but UNHCR offices in Thailand are giving 3 years’ time for decision. ”

But we are getting first-hand reports of Pakistan Christian refugees being rounded up today and arrested by Thailand law enforcement. We have appealed to the Thailand Prime Minister, the UNHCR, the Thailand embassy in Washington DC, and the United States embassy in Bangkok, to work to delay such arrests until the UNHCR can review and make decisions on their refugee applications. The content of our letters today are listed below.

We call for all women’s rights activists, all human rights activists, and all those who respect our universal human rights to act to support these women and other Pakistan Christian refugees who are being arrested and hunted in churches and the market to be round up and sent to Immigration Detention Centers.

==============================================

Letter to Thailand Prime Minister

March 9, 2015

Kingdom of Thailand
The Secretariat of the Prime Minister
Government House, 1 Phitsanulok Road, Dusit, Bangkok 10300
General Prayut Chan-o-cha, Prime Minister
Honorable Prime Minister –
With great respect, I am contacting you on behalf of the human rights volunteer group Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) regarding the need to assist Christian refugees who have fled from Pakistan due to the oppressive religious discrimination that they are facing in that country, and who are seeking asylum. (R.E.A.L. is based in the United States of America.)

These Pakistan Christian refugees have applied for asylum with the UNCHR, including women and children, who are refugees from religious oppression in Pakistan. I urge the government of Thailand to grant asylum to these refugees, or to at least give them the opportunity to seek asylum in the United States of America through the U.S Embassy in Bangkok.

I thank you for your stand on women’s rights, yesterday, on International Women’s Day.

There are many women, however, who need your leadership, as well as children and men among the Pakistan Christian refugees who have fled Pakistan seeking safety and asylum. There many thousands of Pakistan Christian asylum seekers who are contributing members to your nation and your economy while they await the decision on their asylum applications with office of UNHCR in different cities of Thailand.

Today, March 9, 2015, I have been hearing reports from Pakistan Christians whose fellow refugees are currently being arrested in Thailand today, and are being held in Thailand Immigration Detention Centres (IDC). We have heard from Pakistan refugees as to the immediate and urgent situation for the Pakistan Christian asylum seekers in Thailand, who have communicated directly with our human rights group on the plight Pakistan Christians seeking asylum.

Pakistan Christian refugees seeking asylum by Thailand have been communicating in an appeal to human rights groups to address their plight. One such Pakistan Christian asylum seeker, Jarvas Jerry, died last week as he was waiting for medical care, which apparently came too late. Mr. Jarvas Jerry died in the Siri raj hospital Bangkok on February 28, 2015. He had applied for asylum with the UNCHR.

I join with other human rights groups in appealing to your mercy and your own stand on human rights, just yesterday, to protect such rights for the safety and dignity of Pakistan Christians seeking asylum. I join the voices of other human rights groups on behalf of Pakistani Christians as token of mercy and human rights to ask you to direct the Thailand police to not make unnecessary arrests under immigration rules to allow their UNCHR applications to be considered.

I have appealed to your Ambassador here in the United States as well as to others. Please show the mercy and the commitment to human rights to these Pakistan Christian refugees, which you expressed in your speech to the world on International Women’s Day on March 8.

We share those common goals together, sir. Surely, mercy to these Pakistan Christian refugees would be great demonstrations of our ability to mutual demonstrate such support. Please let me know what we can do to assist your nation on this serious problem.

Jeffrey Imm, Founder
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)

==============================================

Letter to UNHCR

March 9, 2015

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
Case Postale 2500
CH-1211 Genève 2 Dépôt
Suisse.
Telephone: +41 22 739 8111
FAX: +41 22 739 7377

cc: UNHCR Regional Representative in Thailand
3rd Floor, United Nations Building, Rajdamnern Nok Avenue, 10200 Bangkok, Thailand
Telephone: 66 2 288 1858
FAX: 66 2 280 0555
Email: thaba@unhcr.org

UNHCR Headquarters and UNHCR Office in Thailand –
I am with the human rights volunteer group Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), and I am contacting you on behalf of Pakistan Christian refugees who have fled from Pakistan due to the oppressive religious discrimination that they are facing in that country. They have applied for UNHCR refugee status and they are seeking asylum as refugees.

I have heard directly from Thailand-based refugees who have applied for asylum as refugees with the UNHCR offices in Bangkok, Thailand. Some of these refugees have been waiting for years on a refugee status decision. In the meantime, the Thailand police are arresting Pakistan Christian asylum seekers. I was directly contacted about a round of arrests in Thailand today, March 9, 2015.

Pakistan Christian women, children, and men refugees are desperately seeking asylum as refugees from the oppression that they routinely face in Pakistan.

I join with the Pakistan Christian Congress and other human rights groups which call for your agencies to take action to protect the universal human rights, dignity, and security, of such refugees who have placed their hopes in your commitment to the universal human rights that the United Nations has itself declared as standard for all nations of the world.

Yesterday, the world celebrated International Women’s Day. Today women and children Christian refugees fleeing from Pakistan are now hiding from arrests going on in Thailand, while they have been awaiting action by the UNHCR.

There are many thousands of Pakistan Christian asylum seekers who are contributing members to Thailand and its economy while they await the UNHCR decision on their asylum applications with office of UNHCR in different cities of Thailand.

Today, March 9, 2015, I have been hearing reports from Pakistan Christians whose fellow refugees are currently being arrested in Thailand today, and are being held in Thailand Immigration Detention Centres (IDC). We have heard from Pakistan refugees as to the immediate and urgent situation for the Pakistan Christian asylum seekers in Thailand, who have communicated directly with our human rights group on the plight Pakistan Christians seeking asylum.

Pakistan Christian refugees seeking asylum by Thailand have been communicating in an appeal to human rights groups to address their plight. One such Pakistan Christian asylum seeker, Jarvas Jerry, died last week as he was waiting for medical care, which apparently came too late. Mr. Jarvas Jerry died in the Siri raj hospital Bangkok on February 28, 2015. He had applied for asylum with the UNCHR.

Please act to support these women, children, and men Christian refugees in Thailand who are only seeking the universal human rights that the United Nation is committed to in its Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) for the world.

Jeffrey Imm, Founder
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)

==============================================

Letter to Thailand Embassy in United States

March 9, 2015

Kingdom of Thailand
Royal Thai Embassy
1024 Wisconsin Avenue, NW, Suite 40
Washington, DC 20007
United States
Contact: H.E. Mr. Pisan Manawapat – Ambassador
Telephone: (202) 944-3600
Thailand Embassy/Consulate Email: information@thaiembdc.org, consular@thaiembdc.org

Honorable Ambassador Pisan Manawapat –
With great respect, I am contacting you on behalf of the human rights volunteer group Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) regarding the need to assist Christian refugees who have fled from Pakistan due to the oppressive religious discrimination that they are facing in that country, and who are seeking asylum. (R.E.A.L. is based in the United States of America.)

These Pakistan Christian refugees have applied for asylum with the UNCHR, including women and children, who are refugees from religious oppression in Pakistan. I urge the government of Thailand to grant asylum to these refugees, or to at least give them the opportunity to seek asylum in the United States of America through the U.S Embassy in Bangkok.

I am available to meet with you in person in Washington DC at your embassy on behalf of these Pakistan Christian refugees. Please let me know your schedule, and I will come to the embassy to meet with you and explain the situation these Pakistan Christians face, and why their asylum is so essential.

Honorable Ambassador Pisan Manawapat – I know you are well aware of the struggles that religious minorities face from extremists, as Thailand itself has a history of suffering from such extremist challenges, which I know you are well aware in your role in the foreign ministry. I have myself reported on such extremist challenges in Thailand over the past decade, urging assistance for your nation from the United States on our shared challenge from extremists.

Today, March 9, 2015, I have been hearing reports from Pakistan Christians whose fellow refugees are currently being arrested in Thailand today, and are being held in Thailand Immigration Detention Centres (IDC). We have heard from Pakistan refugees as to the immediate and urgent situation for the Pakistan Christian asylum seekers in Thailand, who have communicated directly with our human rights group on the plight Pakistan Christians seeking asylum. One such Pakistan Christian asylum seeker, Jarvas Jerry, died last week as he was waiting for medical care, which apparently came too late. Mr. Jarvas Jerry died in the Siri raj hospital Bangkok on February 28, 2015. He had applied for asylum with the UNCHR.

Please sir, I urge you to speak to your Thailand government regarding this situation. These Pakistan Christian refugees have UNHCR refugee applications.

I request the opportunity to speak or meet with you, so I can see how we can assist Thailand to help these refugees. These Pakistan Christian refugees in Thailand seeking asylum from oppression include many women and children.

As you stated in your recent letter to the Washington Post, “Thailand looks forward to working with the US to advance our mutual interests in fighting extremism, supporting human security, global health. security, climate change and many more.”

We share those common goals together, sir. Surely, mercy to these Pakistan Christian refugees would be great demonstrations of our ability to mutual demonstrate such support.

I have the greatest respect for your leadership for the Thai people, and I respect your commitment to human rights and human dignity. Please let me know what we can do to assist your nation on this serious problem.

Jeffrey Imm, Founder
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)

==============================================

Letter to United States Embassy in Thailand

March 9, 2015

Embassy of the United States of America
Bangkok, Thailand
Chargé d’affaires, a.i.
W. Patrick Murphy
GPF Tower A, 10th Floor, 93/1 Wireless Road,
Bangkok 10330, Thailand
Telephone: +66-2-205-4485
Central Fax: +66-2-650-8921
IRC Fax: +66-2-650-8918; BKK CIS Fax: +66-2-650-7770

Chargé d’affaires, a.i., W. Patrick Murphy –
In lieu of a new U.S. ambassador to Thailand, I am contacting you on behalf of the human rights volunteer group Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) regarding actions by the Thailand government involving Christian refugees who have fled from Pakistan due to the oppressive religious discrimination that they are facing in that country, and who are seeking asylum. (R.E.A.L. is based in the United States of America.)

Since these Pakistan Christian refugees are being not granted asylum by Thailand, these individuals seeking asylum have been communicating in an appeal to human rights groups to address their plight. One such Pakistan Christian asylum seeker, Jarvas Jerry, died last week as he was waiting for medical care, which apparently came too late. Mr. Jarvas Jerry died in the Siri raj hospital Bangkok on February 28, 2015. He had applied for asylum with the UNCHR.

Today, March 9, 2015, I have been hearing from Pakistan Christians who are currently being rounded up and arrested in Thailand today, and are currently being held in Thailand Immigration Detention Centres (IDC).

We have heard from Pakistan refugees as to the immediate and urgent situation for the Pakistan Christian asylum seekers in Thailand, including a Mr. Imran Ishaq, who has communicated directly with our human rights group on the plight Pakistan Christians seeking asylum. Refugee Imran Ishaq has led the Iman Foundation Trust in support of such Pakistan Christian refugees (ImanFoundationTrust@praxitech.com).

Please sir, I urge you to speak to the Thailand government regarding this situation. These Pakistan Christian refugees have UNHCR refugee applications, but the UNHCR has not taken action on this yet. Human rights groups have reached out to the Thailand Prime Minister on this.

We have this urgent situation where Pakistan Christian refugees desperately need asylum. If the Thailand government continues to deny asylum to these refugees and the UNHCR has not supported such refugee applications, I call upon the United States of America’s embassy in Bangkok to grant Pakistan Christian refugee visitors to the U.S. asylum for safe passage to the United States of America.

The U.S. Embassy can do this, in accordance with U.S. CIS asylum application Form I-589, Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal. There are Pakistan Christians seeking asylum to the United States today.

Mr. Murphy – I know that you share our commitment to the universal human rights of fellow human beings, and yesterday (March 8) you stood to celebrate International Women’s Day and reaffirm your commitment to women’s rights, along with other women around the world, as did our human rights organization. These Pakistan Christian refugees in Thailand seeking asylum from oppression include many women and children. Please let our actions match our words of commitment, sir.

Thank you for your time. Please help these refugees who need to be heard.

Jeffrey Imm, Founder
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)

==============================================

Myanmar State Security Involved in Human Trafficking of Rohingya Muslims

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) has become aware of a new human rights report on the ongoing human rights crisis of Rohingya Muslims, which indicates that the Myanmar state security forces are “complicit in and profiting from” human trafficking of Rohingya Muslims refugees, seeking to flee from violence and persecution.

On November 7, 2014 the Fortify Rights group reported, “Myanmar state security forces are complicit in and profiting from the increasingly lucrative maritime human trafficking and smuggling of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar’s Rakhine State, Fortify Rights revealed in a briefing released today. Since 2012, Myanmar state security forces in Rakhine State have collected payments from Rohingya asylum seekers fleeing Myanmar by ships operated by transnational criminal syndicates, according to information obtained by Fortify Rights. In some cases, the Myanmar Navy escorted boats operated by criminal gangs out to international waters.”

“Local Rohingya brokers mostly deliver payments to members of the Lon Thein riot police, Myanmar Police Department, Navy, and Army in amounts ranging from 500,000 kyat ($500 USD) to 600,000 kyat ($600 USD) per shipload of Rohingya asylum seekers in exchange for passage out to sea. In one case documented by Fortify Rights, the Myanmar Navy demanded 7-million kyat ($7,000 USD) from a criminal gang operating a ship filled with Rohingya fleeing to Malaysia. In other cases, members of the Myanmar Police Department took up to 15,000 kyat ($15 USD) per person directly from individual Rohingya passengers.”

“From September 2013 to October 2014, Fortify Rights interviewed more than 90 Rohingya men and women in Myanmar, Thailand, and Malaysia, many of whom fled the country between 2012 and 2014. Thousands more have fled in recent weeks.”

“Tens of thousands of Rohingya in Rakhine State are now preparing to board 50-to-100-person occupancy boats on the western coast of Myanmar. These boats transport Rohingya asylum seekers to larger ships in the Bay of Bengal that hold as many as 1,000 people. The vast majority of Rohingya who depart by sea soon find themselves in the custody of abusive human trafficking and smuggling gangs, who detain them in conditions of enslavement and exploitation.”

“Most Rohingya are fleeing persecution in Myanmar. Before boarding ships, they are generally not fully informed and, in many cases, are deceived about the treatment they will endure, additional costs, and other aspects of the journey to Malaysia. Many are sold multiple times and for a myriad of reasons, including for labor and sexual exploitation. Nearly all endure or witness torture, deprivation of food and water, confinement in extremely close quarters, and other abuses throughout their journey.”

“In 2012, civilians and state security forces razed Muslim villages in 13 of 17 townships in Rakhine State. More than 300,000 people — predominantly Rohingya Muslims — are now in need of humanitarian aid in the state, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Aid. That includes 70,000 ‘food insecure’ people, 50,000 living in isolated villages, 50,000 in ‘host communities,’ and approximately 140,000 Rohingya and non-Rohingya Muslims living in more than 80 internally displaced person (IDP) camps. More than 100,000 Rohingya reportedly fled the country by sea in the last two years. Rakhine Buddhists also endured casualties and displacement in Rakhine State in 2012 on a lesser scale.”

“Scores of Rohingya who were displaced in Rakhine State told Fortify Rights that inadequate food, health care, and livelihood opportunities in the IDP camps as well as restrictions on movement and fear of future persecution contributed to their decision to flee Myanmar.”

“Moreover, more than 1 million Rohingya continue to be directly affected by persecutory state policies restricting their movement, marriage, childbirth, and other aspects of everyday life in Rakhine State. Rohingya who were not displaced by attacks in 2012 but still face persecution told Fortify Rights that they fled the country due to restrictions imposed by the state, including restrictions on freedom of movement, threats of violence, and ongoing pressure to abandon their ethnic identity.”

Fortify Rights’ report calls for action on Myanmar for the Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report by the U.S. Department of State.

“Trafficking in persons is prohibited under international law, and states have a duty to take action to combat trafficking. Human trafficking includes elements of deceit, exploitation, and abuse. Human smuggling, on the other hand, involves a ‘client’ consenting and paying to be transported across an international border.”

“In June 2014, Myanmar maintained its place on the United States Department of State’s tier-two watch list in the annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report. Myanmar has remained on the tier-two watch list through a system of waivers. Unless demonstrable changes take place in the next year, the country could be downgraded to tier-three status — the lowest designation reserved for countries failing to adequately combat human trafficking.”

A Rohingya Muslim man who fled Myanmar to Bangladesh to escape religious violence, cries after he and others were intercepted in Taknaf, Bangladesh. (PHOTO AP)
A Rohingya Muslim man who fled Myanmar to Bangladesh to escape religious violence, cries after he and others were intercepted in Taknaf, Bangladesh. (PHOTO AP)