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....Motto: "Voice for the voiceless,neglected and hidden"....
....Motto: "Voice for the voiceless,neglected and hidden"....
12:05 AM
Posted by VOCR
Chin State is a state located in the western sector of Burma (Union of Myanmar). Its capital is Hakha. The 13,907-square-mile (36,020 km2) Chin State is home to Zomi also known as Chin and Bamar ethnic groups1.
According to the UNHCR, there are more than 32,000 Burmese refugees registered in Malaysia. However, there are many more who are unregistered and the unofficial figure may well be more than half a million.
These refugees ran away from their country to escape religious and political persecution but here in Malaysia they face a reality as hard as the one back home. They are fighting hard to obtain their refugee status by the local government. Not securing refugee status means their children cannot attend school and are deprived of education, they live in constant fear of the police & RELA officers, they are reduced to accepting underpaid jobs and are sometimes forced into hiding in the jungles to escape this hard reality.
The Path of A Refugee
There is a Burmese inspiring folk story that says about a woman living in fear. The story is like this - Long time ago, there was a poor woman in a village near to a forest. One day the woman went to collect fire woods, unexpectedly she heard sound of roaring. She was so scared of that she hid around the bushes and gradually approached a gentle man. As soon as she met, with the gentle man, she felt very much comforted but not very long after that moment, the poor pretty woman discovered that the gentle man was worse than the tiger.
A refugee’s life is desperate one. A refugee would find for the safety of his life in any possible means and approach any direction that is first available for him/her. Refugee life is sometime just like the poor woman in the story. Inevitable choices are laid in front of refugees. The situation forced refugees to approach sometimes the wrong place where the wrong persons who look down them and abuses their rights.
Refugee usually faces additional inevitable human rights abuses in their transit countries before resettlement to third countries where they would reestablish a new life.
Sometimes it is also common that the one that helps or is working for refugees also unknowingly committed human rights violations upon the refugees. However, the refugee would not spoke up about it fearing for their further solutions.
So, where should a refugee go? A refugee approaches human trafficker and a refugee approaches insecure places of occupation but just for survival. Sometimes, a refugee inevitably walks through bridges where mocking, assaults and discrimination are still around.
The path of a refugee will only be destined at a place where he/she will gain all his rights as a human
June 25, 2009 at 12:54 PM
It's time to tell the truth on Chins. It's time to respect other chin ethnic groups. The use of Zomi is good but Chin is named in many ways by different chin ethnic groups. Please be honest to others and respect others. Zomi is only for your sub-ethnic group. There is no Majarity. All have the same rights.
"Chin State is home to Zomi also known as Chin and Bamar ethnic groups1."
Chin State is home to all sub-ethnic group such as Lai, Mizo, Zo, Zomi,Kuki and so on.
Thank you
July 20, 2009 at 9:43 PM
We Chins should not be lost in the concern of our ethnicity in terms of heading to the success instead we ought to try building a unity regardless of name, dialect and location of our clans.
July 22, 2011 at 1:56 PM
Zomi is a term used by Tiddim Chin, while Laimi is used by Hakha, Falam, Thlantlang Chins. Mizo is used by Duhlian speaking Chins, so on and so forth. Therefore, it is unfair to use Zomi as equal to Chin. Chin covers Asho Chin, Zomi, Laimi, Mizo, Mara, Senthang, Zotung, Matu, Daai, etc - all the tribes in Chins tate. So, stop inserting your narrow-minded Zomi campaign here.