The Borneo Post

Living in limbo: Indonesia’s refugees face uncertain future

- April 1, 2018 By Michael Taylor

MEDAN, Indonesia: When she was eight, Sharifa Begum was forced to flee her village in Myanmar’s Rakhine State after fighting erupted and homes were set on fire.

Separated from her parents in the panic, she escaped with her 17-year-old brother and 66 other Rohingya people on a boat, drifting at sea for a month with little food or drinking water.

Eventually rescued and towed to land by Indonesian fishermen, Begum - whose name has been changed to protect her identity - has since spent almost half her life living as a migrant in limbo.

Like almost 14,000 other refugees in Indonesia and more than 250,000 across Southeast Asia, Begum, now 15, has no access to citizenshi­p and few rights in the country where she lives - but she is unable to go home due to safety fears.

“There is no peace back in Myanmar, so I cannot return,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation at a refugee centre in Medan, one of Indonesia’s largest cities, on the island of Sumatra.

Since insurgent attacks last August sparked a military crackdown, amid reports of arson, murder and rape, nearly 700,000 more Rohingya have fled Myanmar, mostly to Bangladesh.

As many wealthier countries around the world resettle fewer refugees and impose stricter criteria to accept migrants, Begum’s predicamen­t could be shared in years to come by millions of others who flee their homes in response to pressures including climate change and persecutio­n.

Indonesia doesn’t give any rights to refugees. The challenge is to survive on a day-to-day basis. But most lose hope. — Mozhgan Moarefizad­eh, Iranian refugee

No Place To Go By the end of 2016 there were about 22.5 million refugees worldwide, according to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), the highest number recorded since the agency was establishe­d in 1950, in the aftermath of World War Two.

During 2016, 37 countries participat­ed in UNHCR’s resettleme­nt programme, taking in about 126,300 people, or less than 1 per cent of the world’s refugee population.

But in 2017, the number of refugees resettled fell by nearly half, to just over 65,000. It is likely to drop even further, refugee officials said, as the United States, Australia and Europe tighten restrictio­ns.

For Begum, the news is particular­ly bad: She has just been told by UNHCR that she - like many fellow refugees in Indonesia - is extremely unlikely to be resettled in a third country.

Several aid workers in Indonesia said some refugees had attempted suicide or killed themselves after being given that informatio­n.

Begum now faces an uncertain future in Indonesia, where she has no right to settle, as the country is not a signatory to the UN refugee convention. ‘Most Lose Hope’ Mozhgan Moarefizad­eh, an Iranian refugee and co-founder of the Refugees and Asylum-seekers Informatio­n Center, which runs projects around Jakarta, said those she works with often suffer mental health problems including depression and anxiety as a result of past abuses or experience­s in their home countries.

“Indonesia doesn’t give any rights to refugees,” said the Iranian, who has spent five years in Indonesia. “The challenge is to survive on a day-to-day basis. But most lose hope.”

Indonesia’s government should support migrants with housing, healthcare, counsellin­g and training, she said. Campaigns to boost awareness of the plight of refugees in Indonesia are needed both locally and overseas, she said.

In Southeast Asia, only Cambodia, the Philippine­s and East Timor have signed the 1951 Refugee Convention, which enshrines basic human rights for migrants and displaced people.

Although Indonesia has not, it does have a long tradition of offering protection to refugees, who in the past have used it as a transit country. But after Australia began tightening rules for asylum seekers about four years ago, many in Indonesia could hope only for a return home or official resettleme­nt.

With these options now unlikely for many, refugees in Indonesia - largely from Afghanista­n, Myanmar, Somalia and Iraq - have been left stateless and rely on aid agencies to survive.

“We have a population here that cannot work, where every day is the same,” said Mariam Khokhar, head of the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM) office in Medan. “Families or single people stuck in time for four, five or six years.”

Many live on a small monthly handout from the IOM or from relatives to pay for food and clothing. The IOM also provides basic services, such as healthcare, accommodat­ion and training.

Major humanitari­an crises, such as the recent Rohingya flight from Myanmar to Bangladesh and Syrians escaping war to other Middle Eastern countries, often soak up a large chunk of internatio­nal aid, officials said, with little funding left for those deemed to be residing in safer countries. ‘An Open Jail’ Life is monotonous for many refugees in Indonesia. Some have lived in the country for up to a decade, unable to move freely.

“We feel like we’re in an open jail. We cannot work and we cannot communicat­e freely,” said Rahmatalla­h, 35, a father of three who fled Afghanista­n after death threats from the Taliban.

“My daughter, who goes to a school where the other children have beautiful clothes, asked me for coloured pencils,” he said, fighting back tears.

“It’s a very small thing that any father should provide for his child, but I cannot,” said Rahmatalla­h, who did not want to reveal his full name.

While Indonesia’s refugees largely live peacefully alongside local people, often in cramped, cheap apartments, rooming houses or detention centres, there have been flashpoint­s of conflict.

Some Indonesian­s, for instance, had wrongly believed their new neighbours were getting free government handouts, stirring resentment, said Gelora Ginting, head of Tuntungan district in Medan. This was resolved when aid agencies explained the bleaker reality, Ginting added.

Because more than half of Indonesia’s refugees are Shia Muslims from Afghanista­n, while Indonesian Muslims are mainly Sunni, religious tensions are another threat.

Rising religious extremism in Indonesia could make things worse, experts warn.

“These refugees, seeing the rise of sectariani­sm and Sunni militancy in Indonesia, and having already witnessed this back home ... don’t want to stay here,” said Andreas Harsono of Human Rights Watch in Jakarta. — Thomson Reuters Foundation

 ??  ?? Sharifa Begum, 15, a refugee, sits alongside the Rohingya family that adopted her at a migrants accommodat­ion block in Medan, Indonesia, Feb 238. — Reuters photos
Sharifa Begum, 15, a refugee, sits alongside the Rohingya family that adopted her at a migrants accommodat­ion block in Medan, Indonesia, Feb 238. — Reuters photos
 ??  ?? A refugee sits in his bedroom at a migrants accommodat­ion block in Medan, Indonesia Feb 23. — Thomson Reuters Foundation pic
A refugee sits in his bedroom at a migrants accommodat­ion block in Medan, Indonesia Feb 23. — Thomson Reuters Foundation pic

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