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Serious Jialat! Many Burmese Running Road to Thailand! Ah Sam Got Pray for Them?

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal

'No legal pathways': Myanmar poverty pushes thousands to Thailand​

Undocumented migrants who are intercepted by the Thai authorities are immediately detained and processed for deportation (AFP/Handout)

With borders between Thailand and Myanmar closed since the start of the pandemic, migrants have no choice but to make the journey illegally (AFP/Handout)

1 / 3

'No legal pathways': Myanmar poverty pushes thousands to Thailand​

Undocumented migrants who are intercepted by the Thai authorities are immediately detained and processed for deportation (AFP/Handout)
Lawi WENG with Dene-Hern CHEN in Bangkok
Thu, 6 January 2022, 10:12 am


Trekking through dense jungle and mountainous terrain at night to avoid arrest, one couple from Myanmar endured a gruelling journey to Thailand -- grasping for an economic lifeline as jobs dry up in their coup-hit home.
Myo Chit and his wife are among thousands of migrants who have made the crossing in recent months, spurred by the twin crises of a pandemic-hit economy and turmoil triggered by the junta's ousting of Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government.
Their two-day journey from Myanmar's coastal Tanintharyi Region took them through corn farms, rubber plantations and dense jungle before they reached the porous border, where they crossed into Thailand's Kanchanaburi province with the help of a smuggler.

There they risked arrest and immediate processing for deportation by Thai police.
The couple then travelled to Samut Sakhon province near Bangkok, where Myanmar migrants have historically found work.
But for undocumented migrants in Thailand, life under the radar is grim.
Many spend their nights in overcrowded housing, or in the homes of friends and relatives, and their days evading authorities.
"But we could not stay (in our town)... we had to think about the future of our children," 45-year-old Myo Chit told AFP, using a pseudonym for fear of being tracked down by the Thai authorities.
He eventually secured the job he was desperate for at a clothing dye factory, earning $10 a day.
With a six-year-old child and an infant left in his in-laws' care in Myanmar, Myo Chit said leaving was difficult but had to be done.
"We could not stay there because of high prices -- we had to leave our village," he said. "We came here just to earn money."
- 'It is hard' -
Myanmar workers have long sought jobs in neighbouring Thailand. Pre-pandemic, an estimated two million were living and working in the kingdom.
With borders closed since March 2020, migrants have no choice but to make the journey illegally.
There is no official data on the size of the influx, but experts say one indicator is the number of migrants who have been caught by authorities.
In the months after Myanmar's February 1 coup, the number of arrests tripled, according to Thai government figures.
It peaked in November with more than 6,000 migrants intercepted -- more than a 10-fold increase from the 560 people arrested in January.
According to Geraldine Ansart, the International Organization for Migration's Thailand mission chief, for each person arrested, "it is realistic to assume that... at least one other Myanmar national could cross the border without being apprehended".
Thai-based migrant rights activist Roisai Wongsuban said the spike in arrivals is due to Myanmar's post-coup economic crisis, which has seen inflation soar and work opportunities evaporate.
With food prices doubling and fuel costs spiking as the value of the kyat, Myanmar's currency, plummeted against the US dollar, many people became destitute, she said.
"It is hard for ordinary people."
Seasonal workers, who for years had travelled in and out of Thailand, were left in the lurch after Covid-spurred border closures.
"The border has been closed for so long that there is no legal pathways for workers who want to come back to Thailand," Roisai added.
Thai army spokesman General Santipong Thammapiya said it was mainly Thailand's reopening to tourists in November that was drawing Myanmar workers back -- many of whom staff the kingdom's vital industries, including the service and restaurant sector.
"Workers... wanted to come back," he told AFP. "They also trust the Thai healthcare system, which can provide treatment for Covid."
- Zero tolerance -
Demand for Myanmar workers is high in Thailand, where -- given their status -- they have no choice but to accept lower wages.
According to the labour ministry, there is a shortage of up to 200,000 workers in Thailand.
But according to Santipong, there is no tolerance in Bangkok for illegal migration, and those arrested making the attempt are sent "for legal processing followed by... repatriation", he said.
Despite the obstacles, two people smugglers operating near Kanchanaburi province's Three Pagodas Pass border crossing told AFP business has been good.
Prices to make the crossing range from 13,000 to 25,000 Thai baht ($380 to $750), and desperation drives thousands to pay.
"Some are arrested, but there are even more people who are not," one smuggler told AFP on condition of anonymity.
bur-dhc/ser/pdw/dva
 

winners

Alfrescian
Loyal
Today's situation blames squarely on Aung San Suu Kyi because when she became the ruler, she had abandoned her allies in Asean. So, now the Asean countries are giving her the taste of her own medicine.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset

'No legal pathways': Myanmar poverty pushes thousands to Thailand​

Undocumented migrants who are intercepted by the Thai authorities are immediately detained and processed for deportation (AFP/Handout)

With borders between Thailand and Myanmar closed since the start of the pandemic, migrants have no choice but to make the journey illegally (AFP/Handout)

1 / 3

'No legal pathways': Myanmar poverty pushes thousands to Thailand​

Undocumented migrants who are intercepted by the Thai authorities are immediately detained and processed for deportation (AFP/Handout)
Lawi WENG with Dene-Hern CHEN in Bangkok
Thu, 6 January 2022, 10:12 am


Trekking through dense jungle and mountainous terrain at night to avoid arrest, one couple from Myanmar endured a gruelling journey to Thailand -- grasping for an economic lifeline as jobs dry up in their coup-hit home.
Myo Chit and his wife are among thousands of migrants who have made the crossing in recent months, spurred by the twin crises of a pandemic-hit economy and turmoil triggered by the junta's ousting of Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government.
Their two-day journey from Myanmar's coastal Tanintharyi Region took them through corn farms, rubber plantations and dense jungle before they reached the porous border, where they crossed into Thailand's Kanchanaburi province with the help of a smuggler.

There they risked arrest and immediate processing for deportation by Thai police.
The couple then travelled to Samut Sakhon province near Bangkok, where Myanmar migrants have historically found work.
But for undocumented migrants in Thailand, life under the radar is grim.
Many spend their nights in overcrowded housing, or in the homes of friends and relatives, and their days evading authorities.
"But we could not stay (in our town)... we had to think about the future of our children," 45-year-old Myo Chit told AFP, using a pseudonym for fear of being tracked down by the Thai authorities.
He eventually secured the job he was desperate for at a clothing dye factory, earning $10 a day.
With a six-year-old child and an infant left in his in-laws' care in Myanmar, Myo Chit said leaving was difficult but had to be done.
"We could not stay there because of high prices -- we had to leave our village," he said. "We came here just to earn money."
- 'It is hard' -
Myanmar workers have long sought jobs in neighbouring Thailand. Pre-pandemic, an estimated two million were living and working in the kingdom.
With borders closed since March 2020, migrants have no choice but to make the journey illegally.
There is no official data on the size of the influx, but experts say one indicator is the number of migrants who have been caught by authorities.
In the months after Myanmar's February 1 coup, the number of arrests tripled, according to Thai government figures.
It peaked in November with more than 6,000 migrants intercepted -- more than a 10-fold increase from the 560 people arrested in January.
According to Geraldine Ansart, the International Organization for Migration's Thailand mission chief, for each person arrested, "it is realistic to assume that... at least one other Myanmar national could cross the border without being apprehended".
Thai-based migrant rights activist Roisai Wongsuban said the spike in arrivals is due to Myanmar's post-coup economic crisis, which has seen inflation soar and work opportunities evaporate.
With food prices doubling and fuel costs spiking as the value of the kyat, Myanmar's currency, plummeted against the US dollar, many people became destitute, she said.
"It is hard for ordinary people."
Seasonal workers, who for years had travelled in and out of Thailand, were left in the lurch after Covid-spurred border closures.
"The border has been closed for so long that there is no legal pathways for workers who want to come back to Thailand," Roisai added.
Thai army spokesman General Santipong Thammapiya said it was mainly Thailand's reopening to tourists in November that was drawing Myanmar workers back -- many of whom staff the kingdom's vital industries, including the service and restaurant sector.
"Workers... wanted to come back," he told AFP. "They also trust the Thai healthcare system, which can provide treatment for Covid."
- Zero tolerance -
Demand for Myanmar workers is high in Thailand, where -- given their status -- they have no choice but to accept lower wages.
According to the labour ministry, there is a shortage of up to 200,000 workers in Thailand.
But according to Santipong, there is no tolerance in Bangkok for illegal migration, and those arrested making the attempt are sent "for legal processing followed by... repatriation", he said.
Despite the obstacles, two people smugglers operating near Kanchanaburi province's Three Pagodas Pass border crossing told AFP business has been good.
Prices to make the crossing range from 13,000 to 25,000 Thai baht ($380 to $750), and desperation drives thousands to pay.
"Some are arrested, but there are even more people who are not," one smuggler told AFP on condition of anonymity.
bur-dhc/ser/pdw/dva

Couldn't give a shit about them.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
SocietyNews

Here’s a List of White Liberals Caught Pretending to Be Black​


Peter Hasson / @peterjhasson / September 21, 2020



 width=


Former Spokane, Washington, NAACP President Rachel Dolezal admitted in 2015 that she’s white, despite publicly claiming to be black for years. Pictured: Dolezal leaves the "Today" show taping March 27, 2017, in New York City. (Photo: Ray Tamarra/GC Images/Getty Images)




Three different white liberals in authority roles within universities and activist movements have apologized this month for pretending to be black—and they aren’t the only ones to get caught lying about their racial identities.

Satchuel Cole, an Indianapolis racial justice activist, apologized on Wednesday for misrepresenting her racial identity.

“Friends, I need to take accountability for my actions and the harm that I have done. My deception and lies have hurt those I care most about. I have taken up space as a Black person while knowing I am white,” Cole wrote on Facebook.

“I have used Blackness when it was not mine to use. I have asked for support and energy as a Black person. I have caused harm to the city, friends and the work that I held so dear.”

Cole’s apology came after a local black news website wrote that she had been “exposed for posing as a Black Woman.”

Satchuel Cole, leader in the fight for racial equality in Indianapolis, lied about own race https://t.co/ATlMcIJYXm pic.twitter.com/HUyb71GwXC
— IndyStar (@indystar) September 18, 2020

Cole is just the latest white liberal woman to apologize for pretending to be black.

University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate student CV Vitolo-Haddad apologized and announced her resignation from her teaching position on Sept. 8, admitting that she is actually of Italian heritage, despite repeatedly claiming to be black.

George Washington University history professor Jessica Krug, who specialized in “Africa and the African Diaspora,” apologized on Sept. 3 for presenting herself as black for years.

“To an escalating degree over my adult life, I have eschewed my lived experience as a white Jewish child in suburban Kansas City under various assumed identities within a Blackness that I had no right to claim: first North African Blackness, then US rooted Blackness, then Caribbean rooted Bronx Blackness,” Krug wrote in a Medium post.

Former Spokane, Washington, NAACP President Rachel Dolezal admitted in 2015 that she’s white, despite publicly claiming to be black for years. “I acknowledge that I was biologically born white to white parents, but I identify as black,” she said in a November 2015 interview.

Dolezal had taught Africana Studies at Eastern Washington University before she was exposed as white.

Left-wing activist Shaun King faced accusations in 2015 that he misrepresented himself as black, though King has adamantly denied those accusations.

Both parents listed on King’s birth certificate are white, The New York Times noted in August 2015.

CNN anchor Don Lemon reported that King’s parents are white, citing one of King’s family members. “A family member tells CNN that both of King’s parents are white,” Lemon said.

Unlike Cole, Dolezal, Krug, and Vitolo-Haddad, King has denied falsely claiming to be black, insisting that the man listed on his birth certificate isn’t his real father, leaving the question of whether he lied about his race without a definitive answer.
 
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