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Resettlement leaves gaps in camp services

Silver Moo (center)and Moo Paw Hla (right) were trained as midwifes in 1994 and are currently undergoing special training to deal with emergency deliveries. Nonetheless both plan to resettle to third countries in the near future. Aye Aye Myat (left) is an Brennon Jones/IRIN
The resettlement of Burmese refugees from the nine camps along the Thai border with Myanmar has been something of a success story. More than 43,000 have found homes in some 11 countries since 2004 when the programme began up to the end of 2008. Another 13,000 are expected to leave in 2009.

However, there has been a price to pay in the gap left in key refugee camp services.

Saw Wah Htee, the community leader in Umpium refugee camp in southern Tak Province, told IRIN six of the 15 camp committee members had already resettled, leaving a leadership gap.

Similarly in education. Naw Baw Nyaw, secretary of the Karen Women's Organization (KWO), said: "A major problem is that programme staff is being resettled - particularly teachers. Previously, teachers had experience. Now teachers are newly graduated, with no experience.

"Fifty percent of our teachers have been lost to resettlement since 2005."

Even the nine-member KWO leadership committee has five new members because their predecessors have resettled.

At Umpium refugee camp on the Thai border close to Myanmar, a group of Burmese refugees say their goodbyes and board IOM buses to begin their journeys to resettle in far off countries
Photo: Brennon Jones/IRIN
Of the 43,000 Burmese refugees who have beenn resettled since 2004 until the end of 2008 and the 13,000 additional refugees who are expected to be resettled this year, many are the best educated and skilled and speak English
According to Christopher Lowenstein-Lom, spokesman for the International Organization for Migration (IOM) for Asia and the Pacific: "A large proportion of the young and educated opt for resettlement. Many have worked with NGOs in the camps and have a grasp of English."

The same problem is affecting medical staff in the camps. Tun Khin and his wife are both medics trained by Aide Medicale Internationale (AMI), the French NGO providing healthcare. They are soon expected to depart for the United States.

"We have applied to be resettled in the United States and have a relative in South Dakota."

Bo Bo Lwin, a clinical doctor at the AMI clinic in Umpium refugee camp, told IRIN: "Before we had 34 medics at our clinics in Nupo and Umpium, but 18 have resettled."

Even the pool of midwives is being affected. Silver Moo, who has been a midwife in Nupo camp since 1994, is taking a special training course to deal with emergency deliveries but told IRIN she would soon be resettling in Australia. Her colleague, Moo Paw Hla, who was also trained as a midwife in 1994 and is undergoing the emergency training, says she too will soon resettle, in her case to Nebraska, USA.

In the past, AMI and the American Refugee Committee (ARC) collaborated in training midwives, according to ARC, but "AMI doesn't have the staff and capacity any more because so many of its people have been resettled."

Increasingly, according to camp officials, organisations are training refugees who are not registered with the Thai authorities, in the theory that they will remain in the camps for longer.

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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