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MYO GYI, YOU ROCKS!

MYO GYI, YOU ROCKS!

Grandma, I love you. I always do.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

News 10th of April.

54 Myanmar migrants die in seafood container

BANGKOK, THAILAND - Fifty-four Myanmar migrants have suffocated to death in a cold storage container while being smuggled to Thailand to escape desperate conditions at home, Thai police said Thursday.
The incident was the deadliest in a wave of recent tragedies as people flee economic collapse in military-ruled Myanmar and search for work in Thailand, where they often end up abused and exploited.

Police said that 121 people had been crammed inside an airtight frozen seafood container measuring six metres (20 feet) long and 2.2 metres wide.

Colonel Kraithong Chanthongbai, local police commander in southern Ranong province on Myanmar's border where the bodies were found late Wednesday, said the men and women were trying to get to Phuket island to work as day labourers.
But before they reached their final destination, 37 women and 17 men had suffocated to death in the stifling box with a broken ventilation system.
"The people said they tried to bang on the walls of the container to tell the driver they were dying, but he told them to shut up as police would hear them when they crossed through checkpoints inside Thailand," Kraithong said.
One female survivor told Thai television: "No matter how many times we hit the container, the driver did not pay any attention."
When the truck driver realised some of the migrants had died, he parked by the side of the road, opened the door to the storage box and fled, Kraithong said. Police were still searching for him.
Ten of the migrants remain in hospital suffering from dehydration and lack of oxygen, a hospital worker said, while the dead have been buried in temporary graves in Phuket until their bodies are claimed by relatives.
The 57 migrants who escaped unharmed or were released from hospital have been arrested, Kraithong said.
The Myanmar nationals, who were likely to be deported, had agreed to pay a Thai smuggling ring 5,000 baht (157 dollars) each for the journey.
About 540,000 migrant workers are registered to work in Thailand, most of them from Myanmar, labour ministry figures show, but as many as one million undocumented workers are believed to be in the kingdom.
"Their own country has been made into a pauper state by the military," said David Mathieson, Myanmar consultant for New York-based Human Rights Watch.
The migrants flee low wages, high unemployment, poor education and harassment by the military in the country formally known as Burma, he said, often only to face abuse, persecution and exploitation in Thailand.
"A lot of people from Burma would much rather come and work in a factory in Thailand in desperate conditions with low pay rather than have to do forced labour and have things stolen from them by the Burmese army," he told AFP.
Myanmar is one of the world's poorest countries, its economy battered by decades of mismanagement under military rule and further hampered by Western sanctions imposed over the junta's human rights record.
The nation's economic plight sparked protests last August which, when joined by Buddhist monks in September, snowballed into the biggest anti-government demonstrations in nearly 20 years.
The military responded by opening fire on the crowds, killing at least 31 people, according to the United Nations.
Six months later, the plight of Myanmar's people remains desperate.
Many choose to flee by land to Thailand, or to escape by sea to Singapore, Malaysia or elsewhere in Asia -- all treacherous journeys.
The border with Thailand is littered with landmines and riven by civil war while the long sea trip is usually made on flimsy boats without adequate supplies.
Seven migrants were found dead in January, apparently having drowned in a Thai lake while making the illegal crossing. In December, at least 22 died while making the sea journey when their boat collapsed.
They are not the only migrants in the world risking their lives searching for better conditions for their families.

article taken from : http://www.asiaone.com/News/Latest+News/Asia/Story/A1Story20080410-59123.html


Does it tingle your sadness that so many people died in one day.
They struggle to survive, to move to a better place but ended up dead.
They paid to be smuggle illegally across the boarder at $157 but ended up paying their life for it.
How irresponsible is it to take some one's earning or maybe life saving and leave them to die.
Because their life is not as worthy?
Because they are poor?
How uncivilised can the driver and his accomplice be.
Where have your conscience gone?
Just because they are not as rich, it doesn't mean that their life is not as worth.
Every single human has the same amount of value, same amount of dignity.
I feel really sad for all those who have die in this incident.
To fight proverty they fight hard.Not wanting people to look down on them.Not wanting to be the "last class" anymore.
They deserve our respect.
BURMA

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