Based on our work in Southeast
Asia, Global Colors was invited by the First Lady of the
United States, Laura Bush, to attend a roundtable discussion
at the United Nations.
There were dignitaries from
the UN, groups from Thailand, India, and areas throughout
Southeast Asia, and we were invited to participate to
discuss the dire situation regarding the Burmese Refugees.
Below is an article from the government.
Laura
Bush Highlights Burma Crisis in U.N. Roundtable Discussion
Participants cite human rights abuses, increase in drug-resistant
diseases
By Judy Aita
Washington File United Nations Correspondent
First lady Laura Bush prepares
for a roundtable discussion on Burma. (© AP Images)
United
Nations -- "The United States will work
diligently with other members of the U.N. Security Council
to ensure that the crisis in Burma is not overlooked",
U.S. first lady Laura Bush said September 19.
Taking advantage of media
attention at the opening of the 61st General Assembly
session, the first lady convened a roundtable discussion
to highlight the repressive and destabilizing situation
in Burma and the regime's treatment of democracy activist
and Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who has been under
house arrest for most of the past 17 years.
Bush gathered experts to
discuss what could be done to secure the release of political
prisoners and promote national reconciliation. She also
encouraged journalists attending the event to "get
the story out" so that Burma's leaders would know
that "they can't get away with terrible mistreatment
of their citizens."
In an interview with the
Washington File, Assistant Secretary of State for International
Organization Affairs Kristin Silverberg called the roundtable
discussion "incredibly productive and moving."
The meeting discussed ways
to continue putting pressure on the Burmese regime to
change its treatment toward its people, she said. According
to Silverberg, the Security Council will be meeting with
Gambari before his visit to Burma in October. After he
returns, she said, the council will meet again to discuss
possible actions.
After Gambari's last visit
to Burma in May, during which he met with the head of
Burma's military junta Senior General Than Shwe, the government
renewed Aung San Suu Kyi's house arrest for another year.
(See related article.)
VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN AND CHILDREN
All the roundtable participants
urged the United States to get Security Council action
on Burma, "the sooner the better."
On September 15, after a
yearlong effort, the United States succeeded in having
the situation in Burma officially placed on the agenda
of the U.N. Security Council. (See
related article.)
Hseng spoke of the regime's
use of sexual violence as tool of repression.
The practice of Burmese soldiers
raping women and children continues unabated, Hseng said.
Telling a moving story of the rape of an eight-year-old
girl by soldiers, she said that afterwards members of
the local political party visited the child's parents
and gave them money and a toy for the victim.
Women are organized in villages
and brought to military barracks ostensibly to "put
on a fashion show." Instead, the women are raped,
and some are turned into sex slaves, Hseng said.
Human trafficking is also
a major problem in the country, according to the State
Department.
In its Trafficking in
Persons report for 2006, the department said Burma
does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the
elimination of trafficking and "is not making significant
efforts to do so."
Burmese men, women and children
are trafficked to Thailand, China, Bangladesh, Malaysia,
Korea and Macau for domestic service, forced and bonded
labor in industrial zones and agricultural estates, and
prostitution, according to the report. The Burmese military
has been implicated in trafficking persons for forced
labor, and there have been reports of forced enlistments
of children in the Burmese army. The regime's economic
mismanagement, human rights abuses and forced labor policy
are driving factors behind the country's large human trafficking
problem, the report says. (See
related article.)
POOR HEALTH CONDITIONS
Burma also has serious problems
in the area of health.
Beyrer reported that Burma
chronically underfunds health issues, spending less than
$1 a year per person on health and education. The regime's
budget for HIV/AIDS now totals $75,000 annually, an amount
that was increased three times during the year, he said.
Most Burmese are too poor
to afford medicine, but even those who can are getting
inadequate doses because the drugs available to them are
either counterfeit or below par, Beyrer said.
At the end of 2005, Burma
had one of the most serious HIV/AIDS epidemics in Asia,
with about 360,000 infected, according to the United Nations.
The regime's response to HIV/AIDS remains ambivalent,
the State Department says, and it has impeded humanitarian
operations. In August 2005, the AIDS Global Fund terminated
its Burma operations when it could no longer ensure that
its funds would go to those in need rather than to regime
coffers. (See
HIV/AIDS.)
Because the government is
not spending sufficient money on health issues, the country
also has drug-resistant strains of tuberculosis and malaria
that easily can be transmitted across borders. The government's
handling of avian flu is also endangering the region's
effort to control the threat, Beyrer said. (See
Bird Flu.)
OTHER ISSUES
The flows of Burmese refugees
throughout the region, illicit narcotics, HIV/AIDS and
the human rights situation inside Burma are a threat to
international peace and security, U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations John Bolton said September 18.
About 200,000 refugees who
have fled conflict and persecution in Burma now live in
Thailand, Malaysia, India and Bangladesh. As many as 3,000
ethnic Karen refugees entered Thailand in 2006 after several
military offensives against opposition forces in Burma.
As conditions worsen, hope for the refugees' safe return
diminishes, according to the U.S. State Department.
The United States recently
approved the applications of 2,700 Karen to resettle in
the United States. Resettlement operations began August
15, and more than half of those approved are expected
to arrive in the United States by October 1. The remainder
will arrive before the end of 2006.
(See related article.)
Regarding illicit drug production
and trafficking, the United States has determined that
the
regime
in 2005 again failed demonstrably to meet international
counter-narcotics obligations. Burma is the second largest
producer of illicit opium and produces and traffics amphetamine-type
substances as well.
(See related article.)
"We want to call attention
to the situation in Burma and the threat that its policies
pose to the region and, more broadly, to the fact the
government of Burma's policies are not changing,"
Bolton said.
"If we don't ratchet
up the level of attention, there's no reason to think
those policies will change," the ambassador said.
For additional information
on U.S. policy, see U.S.
Support for Democracy in Burma.