THE DESPERATE PLIGHT OF ROHINGYA REFUGEES IN MALAYSIA
Mary Scully Report News
This
is an account by a Rohingya refugee in Malaysia of the life of
another Rohingya man. It is a story repeated for undocumented
immigrants all over the US, particularly in the border region, &
all over the world. Refugees are not pitiful creatures but human
beings with sacred inviolable rights due them simply because they are
human. Open the damn borders.
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“He is a Rohingya from Myanmar. He fled to Malaysia by boat because of persecution by Myanmar militaries. He is surviving in Malaysia more than five years. He went to UNHCR office many times since he arrived to Malaysia.
“He is a Rohingya from Myanmar. He fled to Malaysia by boat because of persecution by Myanmar militaries. He is surviving in Malaysia more than five years. He went to UNHCR office many times since he arrived to Malaysia.
Unfortunately, he didn’t get the opportunity for the registration
and medical facility. For
his daily base, “He wakes up early to collect plastic and metal to
sell. On a good day, he can make around RM30. But not every day is a
good day. There are days when he only makes RM20,” He has been
doing this since he arrived to Malaysia. He can’t find any job. He
has a wife with five kids living in Batu 4. Apart from this, nobody
helps either. What choices does he have on for his family?
As
we know, Refugees in Malaysia are officially prohibited from working,
so most of them seek employment illegally in order to support their
families. This desperation places them in a perpetually precarious
state where they are left at the mercy of their employers. Sometimes
they are made to work long hours for cheap pay. Sometimes they fire
from the job. Sometimes they are exploited. This is a problem
repeatedly I raised everywhere.
Despite
carrying valid UNHCR documentation, often face the risk of arrest by
the authorities. Even though I have encountered with the authorities
several times while I was working at restaurant as waiter and UNHCR
as an interpreter in Kuala Lumpur & visiting some places. Often
leading me to having to bribe police to escape detention for few days
or 13 days until asking from UNHCR. “That’s become normal for
Rohingya in Malaysia.”
This
is the concrete life of Rohingya in Malaysia. we continue to live
here. Struggling to keep our dignity as we fight to survive.”
Ziaur
Rahman
Victim of Human Traffickers
Victim of Human Traffickers
(Photo
is the fellow Ziaur is describing with his children)