Thailand Sets Long-Awaited Rules for Vetting Asylum Seekers

Rights groups say the long-awaited rules Thailand’s government approved this month for screening foreigners seeking refuge from persecution in their home countries are likely to leave many worthy applicants in the lurch.

The United Nations refugee agency says Thailand currently hosts about 5,000 “urban refugees and asylum seekers,” though some rights groups say the real number may be much higher.

Thailand currently makes no official distinction between refugees or asylum seekers and other foreigners in the country illegally, leaving those seeking sanctuary at constant risk of arrest and a forced return home, where they may face arrest, torture or death.

Authorities often give refugees the chance to lay low or move to third countries, but forced more than 100 ethnic Uyghurs back to China in 2015 and four wanted political dissidents back to Cambodia, where they were promptly arrested, late last year.

“Right now, they [refugees] are always at risk of arrest and deport[ation],” said Naiyana Thanawattho, executive director of rights group Asylum Access Thailand.

Like most other countries in Southeast Asia, Thailand has not ratified the U.N.’s refugee convention. In 2016, though, it did pledge to establish a program granting “protected persons status” to foreigners with a legitimate fear of persecution back home, giving them the legal right to stay in Thailand. The Cabinet approved the outlines of the plan, a so-called National Screening Mechanism, in 2019, with specific criteria for vetting applicants to come later.

The Cabinet approved those criteria Oct. 5.

The rules for refuge

The criteria will not be official until published in the Royal Gazette in the coming weeks and may still be tweaked between now and then. But the Cabinet’s summary of what it approved says the program is for those “unable or unwilling to return to their countries of origin due to potential harm.”

“There must be credible reasons to believe the person may be harmed upon returning,” it adds. “Said harms include physical attacks, threats to life or freedom, torture, enforced disappearance, or other severe human rights violations.”

Thai citizens or permanent residents, migrant workers from Cambodia, Laos or Myanmar, and anyone covered by unspecified Interior Ministry “protocols” would be barred from the program.

Applicants would also have to pass a health screening, a criminal background check, and a review of their “personal and political behavior.” Anyone who makes it through could still be rejected for unspecified “national security” reasons and will have no right to know exactly why.

Rights groups say they welcome the broad definition of what can count as “harm.” They are also glad the rules make it clear that the U.N., nongovernmental groups and lawyers can help people through the application process.

They are worried, though, about the many reasons the criteria give for turning applicants down.

Refugee advocates fear that, with all the possible exemptions, the program “could be the mechanism that screens people out instead of screening people in,” said Waritsara Rungthong of the Refugee Rights Litigation Project, a local legal aid group.

“Some people, they have many status at the same time,” she said. “For example, just because you are a migrant worker doesn’t mean you are not also a refugee.”

Advocates say some refugees may have fled Cambodia, Laos or Myanmar out of genuine fear for their safety and taken up work once in Thailand to support themselves or come strictly for the work at first and only later fallen afoul of their home governments for something they’ve said, done or posted online from abroad.

Rights groups are also unsure about exactly who falls within the groups covered by the Interior Ministry protocols the criteria mention. They fear the groups may include refugees’ children either born in Thailand or born abroad but attending school here. Both groups are eligible for some form of government-issued ID.

A dearth of detail

Advocates are anxious, too, over the lack of specifics about exactly what “national security” concerns might disqualify someone who has cleared all other hurdles, and about what sort of “political behavior” might raise red flags with the authorities. They are worried the vague phrasing could lead to inconsistent decisions on who to approve or reject, and that the government may use “national security” as an excuse to trade favors with other countries that want their dissidents back.

Both the National Screening Mechanism the Cabinet approved in 2019 and the vetting criteria it OK’d this month say that the decisions of the screening committee are final.

Despite that, Thai law allows government orders to be appealed to the country’s Administrative Court, which runs alongside but separate from its civil and criminal courts.

Because the program’s rules do not spell that out, though, some rejected applicants may give up, said Kornkanok Wathanabhoom of Fortify Rights, a nongovernment group focused on Southeast Asia.

“They [the rules] did not clarify, and the applicant, they don’t know about the administrative law, so they [may] never know that they have the right to appeal to the Administrative Court,” she said.

Government spokesperson Anucha Burapachaisri did not reply to VOA’s requests for an interview about the rights groups’ concerns.

Even so, all three rights workers said the program, if and when it finally takes effect, would be a welcome improvement on the status quo and the ever-present fear of forced repatriation that refugees now live with.

Besides letting successful applicants stay in Thailand legally, the program would give them the right to use the country’s public schools and hospitals. While the rules don’t yet say so, advocates hope they’ll be allowed to work as well.

“It’s still better than nothing,” said Naiyana.

“With this step there will be people who will be considered properly, hopefully properly, and going through the process and get the status, and then they can live more safely,” she said. “And that is our aim … to see that people can enjoy their human rights, they can move freely, they can work, their children can go to school, they can live with dignity and make a decision of what their future would be.”

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Southeast Asian Ministers to Discuss Myanmar in Meeting on Thursday

Southeast Asian foreign ministers will hold a special meeting in Indonesia on Thursday to discuss the Myanmar peace process, Cambodia’s foreign ministry said on Sunday.

The talks at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Secretariat in Jakarta will cover the implementation of a five-point peace “consensus” agreed with Myanmar’s military rulers last year to try to end conflict in the country, ministry spokesman Chum Sounry told Reuters.

Myanmar has been trapped in a cycle of violence since the army ousted Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government in February 2021, detaining her and thousands of activists and launching a bloody crackdown on protests and dissent.

The meeting will seek to come up with recommendations on how to push forward the peace process ahead of an ASEAN summit next month, he said by text message. Cambodia is the current chair of ASEAN.

ASEAN, of which Myanmar is a member, has been leading peace efforts but some countries in the 10-nation bloc have become increasingly exasperated by the lack of progress by the junta implementing the plan, which includes engaging with opponents and a cessation of hostilities.

Malaysian Foreign Minister Saifuddin Abdullah said last month ASEAN needed to decide by November whether the peace consensus was still relevant.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

North, South Korea Exchange Warning Fire Amid Tensions

North and South Korea say they have exchanged warning shots near a disputed area off their west coast, the latest indication of heightened military tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

South Korea’s military said it fired warning shots at a North Korean merchant ship that crossed the Northern Limit Line, the de facto Korean sea border, at 3:42 a.m. Monday, local time.

About 90 minutes later, North Korea fired 10 shells from a multiple rocket launcher system in response, according to a North Korean military statement posted on state media.

The North Korean ship crossed the NLL near the South Korean island of Baengnyeong but returned north after the warning, South Korea’s military said.

North Korea does not recognize the NLL and its ships sometimes cross the border, resulting in tense military incidents.

Neither side reported any clashes in Monday’s incident.

Tensions have grown as North Korea conducts an unprecedented barrage of missile tests this year. There are also concerns the North could soon carry out its seventh nuclear test since 2006.

In recent weeks, North Korea has conducted provocative artillery shelling near the inter-Korean sea border and boasted of its ability to conduct strikes with tactical nuclear weapons.

In response, the United States and its ally, South Korea, have increased displays of military strength and ramped up joint defense exercises that had been scaled back for years.

The moves have raised concerns that the two Koreas, still technically in a state of war after their 1950s conflict ended only in a truce, are entering a particularly dangerous phase.

North and South Korea held historic talks in 2018, leading to several agreements that reduced military tensions in the shared border areas. But North Korea, frustrated by the lack of progress in parallel nuclear talks with the United States, soon walked away from both sets of negotiations.

This year, North Korea has tested a record-high 41 ballistic missiles. It also has passed a new law underscoring its status as a nuclear weapons state and declaring it will never abandon its nuclear arsenal.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

HUMANITARIAN AID FOR FLOOD VICTIMS IN PAKISTAN

The Government of Malaysia has contributed USD200,000 to the flood victims in Pakistan. The contribution has been channelled to Pakistani Prime Minister’s Flood Relief Fund 2022 via the local Affin Bank account which was opened by the High Commission of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan in Kuala Lumpur.

 

Malaysia extends its solidarity with the Government and people of Pakistan following the devastating floods that have caused immense sufferings, loss of lives, destruction to infrastructures and properties as well as unprecedented social-economic losses.

 

The people of Malaysia are with the people of Pakistan during this difficult period. Malaysia hopes that the contribution will assist in easing the sufferings of the flood victims.

 

 

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Malaysia

PH Hosts 27th ASEAN Labor Ministers’ meet

The Philippines is hosting the 27th ASEAN Labor Ministers’ Meeting (ALMM) and Related Meetings in Manila this week, Labor Secretary Bienvenido E. Laguesma announced on Sunday.

Expected to attend the meetings from October 25 to 29 are labor ministers and senior labor officials from the 10-member states of ASEAN: Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines.

The labor officials will also hold meetings with ASEAN Plus Three dialogue partners China, Japan and South Korea.

The DOLE Secretary, who will chair the ALMM, said that the biennial meetings serve as a major venue to identify and advance areas of regional cooperation on matters affecting labor and employment.

This year’s meetings mark a return to the face-to-face format, and will focus on the theme of moving beyond the pandemic and further promoting digitalized, inclusive and sustainable recovery and growth for workers.

Included in the agenda of the meetings is the review of the progress of various regional programs on skills development, digitalization, climate change and green jobs, industrial relations and the changing world of work, migration and social protection.

Laguesma said the meetings will also highlight the need for more effective regional responses to unemployment especially in rural communities, rising food prices, and inflation, which are now among the biggest threats to workers’ welfare and well-being in the region.

The labor ministers are expected to come up with priorities for regional actions on improving skills for employment, upgrading competency and professional qualifications standards and the delivery of technical and vocational education and training (TVET); making ICT and digitalization accessible to all, and modernizing agriculture to improve agricultural productivity, enhance food security and create new jobs.

Laguesma noted that this is the first time that agricultural modernization and food security will be among the top priorities in the ALMM agenda.

This is a good development for the Philippines as it is fully aligned with the strategic priorities of President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s socio-economic agenda, Laguesma added.

 

 

 

Source: Department Of Labor and Employment Republic of Philippines